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Groups > comp.lang.python > #41490
| Date | 2013-03-19 08:46 -0400 |
|---|---|
| From | Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> |
| Subject | Re: Best way to find starting directory |
| References | <ki93v1$s7f$1@ger.gmane.org> <ki95lp$bel$1@ger.gmane.org> <ki975r$odu$1@ger.gmane.org> |
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3497.1363697225.2939.python-list@python.org> (permalink) |
On 03/19/2013 04:21 AM, Frank Millman wrote: > On 19/03/2013 09:55, Peter Otten wrote: >> Frank Millman wrote: >> >>> I want to locate a file relative to the directory from which the main >>> program was launched. >>> >>> I have found two ways of finding the starting directory - >>> >>> 1. >>> import os >>> dir = os.getcwd() >> >> This gives the current working directory... >> >>> 2. >>> import os.path >>> import __main__ >>> dir = os.path.dirname(__main__.__file__) >> >> ... and this gives the location of your main script. >> >>> I know that the first one will return the wrong result if os.chdir() has >>> been executed, but I don't do that. >> >> You'll get different results when you launch the script with an explicit >> path: >> >> $ cat millman/demo.py >> import os >> import __main__ >> >> print "cwd:", os.getcwd() >> print "script path:", os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__main__.__file__)) >> $ python millman/demo.py >> cwd: /home/frank >> script path: /home/frank/millman >> >> > > That makes sense. I usually launch the script from its own directory, > but that is not guaranteed. > > Therefore option 2 is the way to go. You might want to reconsider. There are really two different kinds of data files you might want to access from your script. The first is constant data that gets initialized when the script is installed. And the second is user data that he's thinking about right now. For example, if a script uses a saved cache of prime numbers to make calculations a bit faster, it might keep that file in with its own source code, or relative to it. And if I wanted to calculate md5 sums for a directory tree, I'd usually make that my cwd before starting the script. Config files are somewhere in between. In Linux, get them relative to the $HOME environment variable. FWIW, I try to keep all the first kind of files on a separate partition, and except where other programs force me, never let them leak onto the OS+program partition. That way, I'm not likely to lose an important jpeg when the OS trashes its partition. This particular paranoia is left over from my Windows days, but I stick to it anyway. It also makes it easier to migrate to a new OS. Just format the OS partition and install the OS and all the apps. The data is already separate. -- DaveA
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Re: Best way to find starting directory Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-03-19 08:46 -0400
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