433

I am trying to get a list of files in a directory using Python, but I do not want a list of ALL the files.

What I essentially want is the ability to do something like the following but using Python and not executing ls.

ls 145592*.jpg

If there is no built-in method for this, I am currently thinking of writing a for loop to iterate through the results of an os.listdir() and to append all the matching files to a new list.

However, there are a lot of files in that directory and therefore I am hoping there is a more efficient method (or a built-in method).

2
  • [This link might help you :) Get a filtered list of files in a directory ](codereview.stackexchange.com/a/33642)
    – sha111
    Jan 17, 2019 at 10:09
  • Note that you might take special care about sorting order if this is important for your application.
    – lumbric
    Nov 27, 2019 at 20:22

14 Answers 14

609
import glob

jpgFilenamesList = glob.glob('145592*.jpg')

See glob in python documenttion

14
  • 29
    Oh, I just noticed that the Python docs say glob() "is done by using the os.listdir() and fnmatch.fnmatch() functions in concert, and not by actually invoking a subshell". In other words, glob() doesn't have the efficiency improvements one might expect.
    – Ben Hoyt
    Feb 11, 2010 at 4:28
  • 8
    There is one main difference: glob.glob('145592*.jpg') prints the whole absolute path of files while ls 145592*.jpg prints only the list of files.
    – Ébe Isaac
    Dec 2, 2016 at 18:12
  • 8
    @Ben Why would invoking a subshell (subprocess) have any efficiency improvements? Jan 18, 2017 at 8:08
  • 9
    @PauloNeves: true, my comment above doesn't make sense to me 7 years later either. :-) I'm guessing I was referring to the fact that glob() just uses listdir+fnmatch, rather than special operating system calls to do the wildcard filtering. For example, on Windows the FindFirstFile API allows you to specify wildcards so the OS does the filtering directly, and presumably more efficiently (I don't think there's an equivalent on Linux).
    – Ben Hoyt
    Jan 18, 2017 at 16:28
  • 3
    where do you specify the directory? Aug 28, 2021 at 14:13
183

glob.glob() is definitely the way to do it (as per Ignacio). However, if you do need more complicated matching, you can do it with a list comprehension and re.match(), something like so:

files = [f for f in os.listdir('.') if re.match(r'[0-9]+.*\.jpg', f)]

More flexible, but as you note, less efficient.

2
  • 1
    This definitely seems to be more powerful. For example, having to do something like [0-9]+
    – demongolem
    Jan 10, 2013 at 17:03
  • 3
    Yes, definitely more powerful -- however fnmatch does support [0123456789] sequences (see docs), and it also has the fnmatch.filter() function which makes this loop slightly more efficient.
    – Ben Hoyt
    Jan 10, 2013 at 22:42
88

Keep it simple:

import os
relevant_path = "[path to folder]"
included_extensions = ['jpg','jpeg', 'bmp', 'png', 'gif']
file_names = [fn for fn in os.listdir(relevant_path)
              if any(fn.endswith(ext) for ext in included_extensions)]

I prefer this form of list comprehensions because it reads well in English.

I read the fourth line as: For each fn in os.listdir for my path, give me only the ones that match any one of my included extensions.

It may be hard for novice python programmers to really get used to using list comprehensions for filtering, and it can have some memory overhead for very large data sets, but for listing a directory and other simple string filtering tasks, list comprehensions lead to more clean documentable code.

The only thing about this design is that it doesn't protect you against making the mistake of passing a string instead of a list. For example if you accidentally convert a string to a list and end up checking against all the characters of a string, you could end up getting a slew of false positives.

But it's better to have a problem that's easy to fix than a solution that's hard to understand.

3
  • 7
    Not that there is any need for any() here, because str.endswith() takes a sequence of endings. if fn.endswith(included_extentensions) is more than enough.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Oct 8, 2015 at 7:10
  • 4
    Apart from the inefficiency of not using str.endswith(seq) that Martijn pointed out, this is not correct, because a file has to end with .ext for it to have that extension. This code will also find (for example) a file called "myjpg" or a directory named just "png". To fix, just prefix each extension in included_extensions with a ..
    – Ben Hoyt
    Nov 3, 2016 at 19:29
  • 2
    I'm always a bit wary of code in answers which obviously hasn't been run or can't run. The variable included_extensions vs included_extentsions? A pity because otherwise this is my preferred answer.
    – Auspice
    Mar 19, 2018 at 21:35
61

Another option:

>>> import os, fnmatch
>>> fnmatch.filter(os.listdir('.'), '*.py')
['manage.py']

https://docs.python.org/3/library/fnmatch.html

3
  • 8
    This is exactly what glob does on a single line. Apr 12, 2016 at 15:14
  • 2
    Only difference is glob returns the full path as opposed to os.listdir just returning the file name. At least this is what is happening in Python 2. May 1, 2019 at 19:41
  • A very nice solution. Especially for those who are already using fnmatch and os in their script and don't want to import another module ie. glob.
    – Theo F
    Jan 4, 2022 at 12:38
39

Filter with glob module:

Import glob

import glob

Wild Cards:

files=glob.glob("data/*")
print(files)

Out:

['data/ks_10000_0', 'data/ks_1000_0', 'data/ks_100_0', 'data/ks_100_1',
'data/ks_100_2', 'data/ks_106_0', 'data/ks_19_0', 'data/ks_200_0', 'data/ks_200_1', 
'data/ks_300_0', 'data/ks_30_0', 'data/ks_400_0', 'data/ks_40_0', 'data/ks_45_0', 
'data/ks_4_0', 'data/ks_500_0', 'data/ks_50_0', 'data/ks_50_1', 'data/ks_60_0', 
'data/ks_82_0', 'data/ks_lecture_dp_1', 'data/ks_lecture_dp_2']

Fiter extension .txt:

files = glob.glob("/home/ach/*/*.txt")

A single character

glob.glob("/home/ach/file?.txt")

Number Ranges

glob.glob("/home/ach/*[0-9]*")

Alphabet Ranges

glob.glob("/home/ach/[a-c]*")
20

Preliminary code

import glob
import fnmatch
import pathlib
import os

pattern = '*.py'
path = '.'

Solution 1 - use "glob"

# lookup in current dir
glob.glob(pattern)

In [2]: glob.glob(pattern)
Out[2]: ['wsgi.py', 'manage.py', 'tasks.py']

Solution 2 - use "os" + "fnmatch"

Variant 2.1 - Lookup in current dir

# lookup in current dir
fnmatch.filter(os.listdir(path), pattern)

In [3]: fnmatch.filter(os.listdir(path), pattern)
Out[3]: ['wsgi.py', 'manage.py', 'tasks.py']

Variant 2.2 - Lookup recursive

# lookup recursive
for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(path):

    if not filenames:
        continue

    pythonic_files = fnmatch.filter(filenames, pattern)
    if pythonic_files:
        for file in pythonic_files:
            print('{}/{}'.format(dirpath, file))

Result

./wsgi.py
./manage.py
./tasks.py
./temp/temp.py
./apps/diaries/urls.py
./apps/diaries/signals.py
./apps/diaries/actions.py
./apps/diaries/querysets.py
./apps/library/tests/test_forms.py
./apps/library/migrations/0001_initial.py
./apps/polls/views.py
./apps/polls/formsets.py
./apps/polls/reports.py
./apps/polls/admin.py

Solution 3 - use "pathlib"

# lookup in current dir
path_ = pathlib.Path('.')
tuple(path_.glob(pattern))

# lookup recursive
tuple(path_.rglob(pattern))

Notes:

  1. Tested on the Python 3.4
  2. The module "pathlib" was added only in the Python 3.4
  3. The Python 3.5 added a feature for recursive lookup with glob.glob https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/glob.html#glob.glob. Since my machine is installed with Python 3.4, I have not tested that.
12

You can use pathlib that is available in Python standard library 3.4 and above.

from pathlib import Path

files = [f for f in Path.cwd().iterdir() if f.match("145592*.jpg")]
1
  • 3
    Alternatively, just use Path.cwd().glob("145592*.jpg")... Anyway this should definitely be higher on this page. pathlib is the way go
    – Tomerikoo
    May 5, 2021 at 18:33
10

use os.walk to recursively list your files

import os
root = "/home"
pattern = "145992"
alist_filter = ['jpg','bmp','png','gif'] 
path=os.path.join(root,"mydir_to_scan")
for r,d,f in os.walk(path):
    for file in f:
        if file[-3:] in alist_filter and pattern in file:
            print os.path.join(root,file)
2
  • No need to slice; file.endswith(alist_filter) is enough.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Oct 8, 2015 at 7:10
  • We have to use any(file.endswith(filter) for filter in alist_filter) as endswith() does not allow list as a parameter. Nov 9, 2020 at 3:34
5
import os

dir="/path/to/dir"
[x[0]+"/"+f for x in os.walk(dir) for f in x[2] if f.endswith(".jpg")]

This will give you a list of jpg files with their full path. You can replace x[0]+"/"+f with f for just filenames. You can also replace f.endswith(".jpg") with whatever string condition you wish.

4

you might also like a more high-level approach (I have implemented and packaged as findtools):

from findtools.find_files import (find_files, Match)


# Recursively find all *.txt files in **/home/**
txt_files_pattern = Match(filetype='f', name='*.txt')
found_files = find_files(path='/home', match=txt_files_pattern)

for found_file in found_files:
    print found_file

can be installed with

pip install findtools
3

Filenames with "jpg" and "png" extensions in "path/to/images":

import os
accepted_extensions = ["jpg", "png"]
filenames = [fn for fn in os.listdir("path/to/images") if fn.split(".")[-1] in accepted_extensions]
1
2

You can simplify it using List Comprehensions and a regex checker inside it to include image files with the specified postfix.

import re
import os

dir_name = "."
files = [os.path.join(dir_name, f) for f in os.listdir(dir_name) if re.match(r'.*\.(jpg|jpeg|png)', f)]
1
  • Please, add a brief explanation of how/why it solves the problem.
    – rachwa
    Jul 22, 2022 at 20:12
1

You can define pattern and check for it. Here I have taken both start and end pattern and looking for them in the filename. FILES contains the list of all the files in a directory.

import os
PATTERN_START = "145592"
PATTERN_END = ".jpg"
CURRENT_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__))
for r,d,FILES in os.walk(CURRENT_DIR):
    for FILE in FILES:
        if PATTERN_START in FILE.startwith(PATTERN_START) and PATTERN_END in FILE.endswith(PATTERN_END):
            print FILE
3
  • 1
    PATTERN_START should be used as FILE.startwith(PATTERN_START) and PATTERN_END should be used as FILE.endswith(PATTERN_END) to avoid any other file name combination. For example above code will allow jpg_sample_145592 file also. Which is not correct. Nov 9, 2020 at 3:42
  • I think it should be if FILE.startwith(PATTERN_START) and FILE.endswith(PATTERN_END): Nov 9, 2020 at 4:15
  • A Python solution using 2 for-loops is just not OK, not even in 2019. There are multiple ways of doing it without the nested for-loops. See e.g. solution by @ramsey0. Aug 17, 2022 at 12:41
-3

You can use subprocess.check_ouput() as

import subprocess

list_files = subprocess.check_output("ls 145992*.jpg", shell=True) 

Of course, the string between quotes can be anything you want to execute in the shell, and store the output.

1

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