2

[ ok I edit my question since I just got answers corresponding to the first lines of my previous post, and actually this was not the question... so if you post smtg please test before and read the whole thing before thinking I need to know how to test paths in python ;) ]

the whole script, which is detailed below : http://www.pasteall.org/38511/python

the script does not return the same on windows 8 / python33 and on winXP / python 322 and this is about dir exists tests on windows boxes.

say that Im using a windows 8 box with python 3.3

sys.version_info(major=3, minor=3, micro=0, releaselevel='final', serial=0)

I have this existing path on my hd:

D:\ImHere\meToo

a simple script that confirms me these directories exists (Im using a cmd admin prompt to execute the script) :

import os
from os import path
import sys
print(sys.version_info)

def there(p) :
    print('%s %s'%(p,'exists' if os.path.isdir(p) else 'does not exist'))

# got True, ok
print('\nusuals')
path = "D:\ImHere\meToo"
there(path)

# got False, ok
path += "\ImNot"
there(path)

# a bit more academic, tests ok
elms = path.split('\\')
jpath = ''
for elm in elms :
    jpath = os.path.join(jpath,elm)
    there(jpath)

# ... ok
rpath = elms[0] + os.sep + elms[1] + os.sep + elms[2] + os.sep + elms[3]
there(rpath)

this returns in the console :

usuals
D:\ImHere\meToo exists
D:\ImHere\meToo\ImNot does not exist
D: exists
D:ImHere exists
D:ImHere\meToo exists
D:ImHere\meToo\ImNot does not exist
D:\ImHere\meToo\ImNot does not exist

but compare this :

# now, this 'flat loop' is ok too
print('\nflat loop')
wpath = elms[0]
wpath += os.sep + elms[1]
wpath += os.sep + elms[2]
wpath += os.sep + elms[3]
there(wpath)

got :

flat loop
D:\ImHere\meToo\ImNot does not exist

with this :

# but if one calls isdir() in the process
# something is altered, and this ALWAYS returns dir exists
print('\nfails ?')
wpath = elms[0]
wpath += os.sep + elms[1]
there(wpath)
wpath += os.sep + elms[2]
there(wpath)
wpath += os.sep + elms[3]
there(wpath)

win8 / python 33: KO

fails ?
D:\ImHere exists
D:\ImHere\meToo exists
D:\ImHere\meToo\ImNot exists

winXP / python 322: OK

fails ?
D:\ImHere exists
D:\ImHere\meToo exists
D:\ImHere\meToo\ImNot does not exist

it seems the call to isdir() break something in the string ?

FIRST POST

( sorry if its a duplicate, I guess this String concatenation in Python could help about the case, but as I get mad tonight I need to share this.)

I wrote this little loop in a module to create recursive directories when they don't exist. this works fine on xp, python 3.2 :

def mkdir(path) :
    path = clean(path)  # this one generates unix like path
    parts = path.split('/')
    tpath = parts[0]
    for pi in range(1,len(parts)) :
        tpath += '/%s'%parts[pi]
        if os.path.isdir(tpath) == False :
            os.mkdir(tpath)

but when using windows8 + python 33, the directory test always return true.. ? after hours digging and experimenting about quotes and slashes stuffs.. I found the issue was this line:

tpath += '/%s'%parts[pi]

and

tpath = '%s/%s'%(tpath,parts[pi])

solved the case.

what is very odd for me, and by odd I mean absolutely psychedelic, is that the generated string whatever the code looks like to be the same :

print(os.path.isdir(tpath),tpath==path)

gives me 'True True' for the last directory in the first case : generated and input string are the same (and types are string), but the last directory does not exist..

and after the edition it returns a 'False True' as it should.

Im very frightened. the world looks like very odd since a couple of hours. what append with string += concatenation type is ok, bool() tests are ok... ? please save me from madness.. thanks a lot.

17
  • 2
    You should have a look at os.makedirs().
    – Nicolas
    Jan 3, 2013 at 9:16
  • 1
    Why aren't you using os.makedirs()?
    – johnsyweb
    Jan 3, 2013 at 9:16
  • 2
    And apart from that (as it's more generally useful), why aren't you using os.path.join to compose paths? (Of course, that doesn't invalidate the question.)
    – user395760
    Jan 3, 2013 at 9:17
  • 1
    Also why aren't you using os.path.join(), which deals with the path separator being different on different platforms?
    – johnsyweb
    Jan 3, 2013 at 9:17
  • 1
    Finally, I type too slowly :-D
    – johnsyweb
    Jan 3, 2013 at 9:19

1 Answer 1

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to sum up : as Mark Dickinson mentionned, there's a bug with os.path.isdir() in python 3.3 related to the Unicode format(#17137). It looks like to be fixed for next releases and alpha.

meanwhile, to test if folder names exist in a given path, I got consistent results whatever the os and the python >= 3.2 version are, using os.path.join() rather than "path +=" string concatenation in the test loop :

path = "D:\ImHere\meToo\Imnot"

def there(p) :
    print('%s %s'%(p,'exists' if os.path.isdir(p) else 'does not exist'))

elms = path.split('\\')
jpath = ''
for elm in elms :
    jpath = os.path.join(jpath,elm)
    there(jpath)

so, don't use + concatenation with isdir() in python 3.3, and concatenate with join()

[ waiting for Mark approvals :) ]

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