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Re: windows and file names > 256 bytes

Subject Re: windows and file names > 256 bytes
References <mmgce2$cd4$1@ger.gmane.org> <mmgnbt$u0o$1@ger.gmane.org> <CAB1GNpS=7F3ebrHenUu7+MvyWuk5v60G6N6L81c0W3C-mQPi2w@mail.gmail.com> <558BF55C.2010701@timgolden.me.uk> <558C038A.5010103@gmail.com>
From Tim Golden <mail@timgolden.me.uk>
Date 2015-06-25 14:37 +0100
Newsgroups comp.lang.python
Message-ID <mailman.67.1435239479.3674.python-list@python.org> (permalink)

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On 25/06/2015 14:35, Michael Torrie wrote:
> On 06/25/2015 06:34 AM, Tim Golden wrote:
>> On 25/06/2015 13:04, Joonas Liik wrote:
>>> It sounds to me more like it is possible to use long file names on windows
>>> but it is a pain and in python, on windows it is basically impossible.
>>
>> Certainly not impossible: you could write your own wrapper function:
>>
>> def extended_path(p):
>>     return r"\\?\%s" % os.path.abspath(p)
>>
>> where you knew that there was a possibility of long paths and that an
>> absolute path would work.
> 
> The OP mentions that even when he manually supplies extended paths,
> os.mkdir, os.getsize, and shutil.rmtree return errors for him in Python
> 2.7.  So there's more to this problem.
> 

He's probably not passing unicode strings: the extended path only works
for unicode string. For 3.x that's what you do by default.

TJG

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Re: windows and file names > 256 bytes Tim Golden <mail@timgolden.me.uk> - 2015-06-25 14:37 +0100

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