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I am using a file containing brackets in Windows, which requires quotes in external processes.

I am trying to manipulate the location, but as the string is being passed with the quotes, when I use os.path.split, the double quotes are also being split. Is there a better way to do this so that I don't need to do checks on the input string and strip and/or replace the double quotes? I will be joining the filename to a new path that doesn't have double quotes.

fileWithPath = r'"C:\TEMP\my(file).txt"'
... do some stuff ...
sourcepath, filename = os.path.split(fileWithPath)

sourcepath has value: '"C:\TEMP'

filename has value: 'my(file).txt"'

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  • What's wrong with strip? You're already going to 'do some stuff' anyway. >>> fileWithPath.strip('"') Nov 21, 2012 at 20:06
  • Nothing wrong with it, I am relatively new to Python and am looking to find the best way forward.
    – Rob Hunter
    Nov 21, 2012 at 20:13
  • 1
    .strip is easily the best way. :) Nov 21, 2012 at 22:42

1 Answer 1

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The first thing that comes to mind is to nuke the double-quotes that windows gives you:

firsWithPath = fileWithPath.replace('"', '')

But if you want to preserve some quotes and nuke only one ones on the ends, then you're better off with:

firsWithPath = fileWithPath.strip('"')

After either of these operations, splitting on '\\' should work just fine

EDIT:

As @jdi mentions in the comments, you really should split on os.path.sep instead of '\\' for portability

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  • 5
    I would recommend sticking with os.path.split instead of a string split on "\\". It is more portable. Windows paths support "/" in python.
    – jdi
    Nov 21, 2012 at 20:15

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