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Installer Jar

Jython 2.7.3 is distributed via an executable jar file installer. After downloading it, either double click the jython-installer-2.7.3.jar or run java with the -jar option

$ java -jar jython-installer-2.7.3.jar

This will start the regular GUI installer on most systems, or a console installer on headless systems. To force the installer to work in headless mode invoke the installer as:

$ java -jar jython-installer-2.7.3.jar --console

The installer will then walk through a similar set of steps in graphical or console mode: showing the license, selecting an install directory and JVM and actually copying Jython to the file system. After this completes, Jython is installed in the directory you selected. Executing a script in the install directory, jython on Unix-like systems or jython.exe on Windows, will start up the Jython console, which can be used to dynamically explore Jython and the Java runtime, or to run Jython scripts.

Standalone Jar

The standalone option does no caching and so avoids the startup overhead (most likely at the cost of some speed in calling Java classes, but I have not profiled it)

You can try it out by running the installer:

$ java -jar jython-installer-2.7.3.jar

then when you come to the “Installation type” page, select “Standalone”.

The installation will generate a jython.jar with the Python standard library (/Lib) files included, which can be run as:

$ java -jar jython.jar

Of course you can run scripts just by calling them as you might expect:

$ java -jar jython.jar script.py

Or, add this file to the classpath of your application.

Installation options

You can get a list of installer options (to install Jython unattended, for example) by running:

$ java -jar jython-installer-2.7.3.jar --help