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I'm trying to replace a file in a zipped archive with a script using zipfile. The file is one directory, the archive is in another. To do this, I copy everything from the original archive into another, excluding the file I want to replace. Then I write the new version of the file to replace into the new archive, close it, and delete the old archive and rename the new one. Should be easy, right? Wrong.

For whatever reason, the zipfile.write() method has this silly thing it does where it assumes that the second (optional) argument, arcname is the same as your file name, unless you specify it. So, if I have the following:

fileName = "C:\\Documents\\file"
archive.write(fileName)

I will get an archive with a subarchive called "Documents", and within that will be the file. I want the file to be in the root directory of the archive (sidenote: is 'root directory' the right term for what I'm refering to?)

Thing's I've Tried:

  • archive.write(fileName,'') This produced a weird file in the archive, which could not be opened.
  • archive.write(fileName, archive) I really thought this would work, but the system really didn't like it.
  • archive.write(fileNameWithoutPath) This one returned an error, since Python could no longer find the file.

So how do I specify that I want to put the file in the root directory of the archive and still specify its path so Python can find it?

Minor, and semi-related question: Is there a way to create the new archive such that it is hidden in windows explorer?

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  • Hi! You might want to tag this with python as well. You may get a better response!
    – VooDooNOFX
    Nov 6, 2013 at 21:41
  • Did you try using os.path.basename to trim the filename and pass it as arcname?
    – Max
    Nov 6, 2013 at 21:49
  • From your description of the write method with the second argument being the name in the archibe what does archive.write(filename, fileNameWithoutPath) do
    – mmmmmm
    Nov 6, 2013 at 21:50
  • I have no idea why it works, but your suggestion does @Mark! I would have thought this would give me a folder with the same name as the file. Can anyone explain why this happens?
    – wnnmaw
    Nov 6, 2013 at 22:04

1 Answer 1

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I am assuming you want a entry in the zipfile called file containin the contents of C:\Documents\file

From python docs

ZipFile.write(filename[, arcname[, compress_type]])
Write the file named filename to the archive, giving it the archive name arcname

so you want

archive.write(fileName, fileNameWithoutPath)

The first argument is the file that goes in the zip and the second is the name that is to be used in the archive, as it contains no path separators it will not create any directories.

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  • +1 I saw that with intellisense but incorrectly assumed arcname refers to the zip file you're creating. Should have read the description!
    – Jacques
    Jan 27, 2021 at 13:43

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