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I have a python program that must work on Windows and Linux. There are some configuration options I normally store in a file, in a subdirectory of the program's directory.

For Windows, I converted it to exe and created an Installer for it. And now I have the problem of dealing with the config file.

What is the best place to save the configuration file? I have read that for Windows os.environ['APPDATA']+'myAppName' is the path that must be used. Is it correct? Is it standard? Will it work in all versions of Windows at least from XP (and at least in English and Spanish)?

PD: I am not interested in using ConfigParser. Config file is in my own format and I have working code for reading/writing from it.

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3 Answers 3

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Storing settings in the user directory is usually a good idea.

These days, you should probably use something like the appdirs library to find a good path to store your configuration in.

Under most Unices, just store a (preferably dot-prefixed) file in the home directory. Under OS X, you'd want to create a directory for your application in the user's Library folder, and store your files there. Under Windows, APPDATA is a good place to build a directory in for your application. It should work on all Windows localizations, and it looks like it was also available in Windows XP.

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  • Thank you for your advice. So you said is it safe to use APPDATA no matter what version of Windows is used (XP, Vista, 7... 32bits, 64bits... English, Spanish)?
    – jeanc
    Jun 27, 2012 at 14:57
  • Latest standards seem to suggest to use a directory under ~/.local to store application data.
    – glglgl
    Jun 27, 2012 at 15:03
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    @glglgl for application data, you are correct. But the OP is asking about for user-configurable application settings , you should use ~/.config if $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set. If you're complying with the XDG Base Directory Specification, that is.
    – scottbb
    Jun 26, 2017 at 18:53
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platformdirs

There is a better solution now ... better than speculating about what is best on each platform, better than environment variables which may or may not be defined, and even better than appdirs: platformdirs (GitHub, PyPI Snyk).

import platformdirs
appname = 'OurGreatApp'
print(f"User config files should be stored in {platformdirs.user_config_dir(appname)}")
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On Linux, it is common to store the configuration file in the users home directory, for instance ~/.myprogramrc. On windows Vista and up, users have a home directory as well (/Users/username) and a would recommend storing your settings there in a subfolder (/Users/useranem/myprogram). Storing the settings in the application folder will generate UAC warnings.

On Windows XP, users do not have a home folder. Some programs make the choice of putting configuration in the 'My Documents' folder which I guess is as good a place as any.

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    On XP, there is a kind of home folder as well. It is the parent of the My Documents folder. But it is not advisable to sore something there; instead, the APPDATA method should be used.
    – glglgl
    Jun 27, 2012 at 14:41
  • thanks for your help. As Rodin said, UAC is a problem when writing files to "Program Files". @glglgl I don't have a XP machine to test, do you know what would be the path to APPDATA in this OS?
    – jeanc
    Jun 27, 2012 at 14:54
  • Here (WinXP, German version) it is C:\Dokumente und Einstellungen\myusername\Anwendungsdaten, under an English one probably C:\Documents and Settings\myusername\Appdata or similiar.
    – glglgl
    Jun 27, 2012 at 15:00
  • On XP there's an environment variable called HOMEPATH which contains the path to the current user's home folder.
    – martineau
    Jun 27, 2012 at 16:54
  • As was said in a comment to the accepted answer, instead of using ~/.myprogramrc, you should use $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/myprogram/myprogramrc, which commonly resolves to ~/.config/myprogram/myprogramrc.
    – domsson
    May 19, 2020 at 12:15

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