371

How do I count only the files in a directory? This counts the directory itself as a file:

len(glob.glob('*'))
1
  • 2
    To leave out directories, you can do '*.fileextension' for whatever file extension you are looking for.
    – user2891129
    Mar 24, 2018 at 2:28

29 Answers 29

416

os.listdir() will be slightly more efficient than using glob.glob. To test if a filename is an ordinary file (and not a directory or other entity), use os.path.isfile():

import os, os.path

# simple version for working with CWD
print len([name for name in os.listdir('.') if os.path.isfile(name)])

# path joining version for other paths
DIR = '/tmp'
print len([name for name in os.listdir(DIR) if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(DIR, name))])
11
  • 17
    Remember to add the folder_path inside os.path.filename(name) if you're not on the cwd. stackoverflow.com/questions/17893542/… Apr 10, 2014 at 14:54
  • 7
    For recursively counting files nested inside directories, you might be better off with the os.walk() solution.
    – Joel B
    Dec 23, 2015 at 21:23
  • 3
    What is the benefit of using os.path.join(DIR, name) over DIR + '/' + name? The latter is shorter and, IMO, more clear than the former. Is there perhaps some OS:es on which the latter would fail? Jun 16, 2016 at 13:46
  • 2
    @HelloGoodbye That's exactly the reason.
    – ellockie
    Nov 29, 2016 at 16:28
  • 11
    For those who uses python3, print(len(os.listdir('DIRECTORY_PATH'))) Jan 8, 2021 at 3:31
183
import os

_, _, files = next(os.walk("/usr/lib"))
file_count = len(files)
4
  • 8
    This isn't recursive Oct 2, 2019 at 13:51
  • 23
    The OP didn't ask for it to be recursive
    – Fandango68
    May 25, 2021 at 19:47
  • does os.walk no print it in sorted order? Aug 8, 2022 at 20:22
  • Fails if folder is empty with StopIteration
    – John Glen
    Sep 14, 2022 at 1:54
86

For all kind of files, subdirectories included (Python 2):

import os

lst = os.listdir(directory) # your directory path
number_files = len(lst)
print number_files

Only files (avoiding subdirectories):

import os

onlyfiles = next(os.walk(directory))[2] #directory is your directory path as string
print len(onlyfiles)
4
  • 3
    This isn't recursive Oct 2, 2019 at 13:51
  • 2
    The editing queue is full so... Please, do not use the builtins (list, dir) as a variable name or a placeholder!
    – Nick Vee
    Jan 3, 2022 at 15:52
  • @NickVeld FTFY...
    – MattDMo
    Aug 12, 2022 at 16:13
  • Fails if folder is empty with StopIteration
    – John Glen
    Sep 14, 2022 at 1:55
53

This is where fnmatch comes very handy:

import fnmatch

print len(fnmatch.filter(os.listdir(dirpath), '*.txt'))

More details: http://docs.python.org/2/library/fnmatch.html

1
  • 6
    This is much faster (about half the time with my testing on a directory with 10,000 files) if you know the pattern you're looking for, rather then testing each file with os.path.isfile() as the accepted answer does. Also significantly faster than glob.glob().
    – CivFan
    Apr 27, 2016 at 15:54
35

If you want to count all files in the directory - including files in subdirectories, the most pythonic way is:

import os

file_count = sum(len(files) for _, _, files in os.walk(r'C:\Dropbox'))
print(file_count)

We use sum that is faster than explicitly adding the file counts (timings pending)

4
  • 1
    Hi, I was trying to understand this code (the code works perfect), I know we can use _ in a for loop. os.walk also I know. But not sure what's going on with underscores inside the sum function, could you please elaborate. Thanks!
    – Ejaz
    Jan 2, 2018 at 13:22
  • 1
    Unsderscore is just a variable name @Ejaz, by convention used when we ignore the variable - that's what we do here - we call walk and only count the number of files in each directory, ignoring the root and dirs walk return values Jan 3, 2018 at 18:58
  • 3
    This is completely recursive and probably the best answer here.
    – Pixel78
    Sep 22, 2020 at 21:25
  • 1
    This should be the most appropriate answer, to also count the files in any subfolders..
    – NoobCat
    Oct 13, 2020 at 13:54
27

An answer with pathlib and without loading the whole list to memory:

from pathlib import Path

path = Path('.')

print(sum(1 for _ in path.glob('*')))  # Files and folders, not recursive
print(sum(1 for _ in path.rglob('*')))  # Files and folders, recursive

print(sum(1 for x in path.glob('*') if x.is_file()))  # Only files, not recursive
print(sum(1 for x in path.rglob('*') if x.is_file()))  # Only files, recursive
4
  • 2
    Best answer by far!
    – William Le
    Jun 28, 2022 at 9:50
  • 3
    or just sum(1 for _ in path.iterdir()) or sum(1 for _, x in enumerate(path.iterdir()) if x.is_file()). Not recursive. Dec 9, 2022 at 21:54
  • 1
    Instead of path.glob('**/*') use path.rglob('*'), for recursive versions.
    – supermitch
    Mar 30, 2023 at 23:16
  • 1
    @MaximilianWolf Also an option, but it may have different behavior, so I used glob to have the same behavior for both recursive and non-recursive variants.
    – Paul
    Aug 12, 2023 at 9:17
25

Short and simple

import os
directory_path = '/home/xyz/'
No_of_files = len(os.listdir(directory_path))
3
  • Also, no need of directory path if the python file is in the same directory. Mar 22, 2021 at 12:49
  • 1
    Importantly, this works well in Python 3 Oct 7, 2022 at 19:03
  • 1
    This solution counts also directories, not only files as it was indicated in question.
    – maciejwww
    Feb 9, 2023 at 14:25
20

I am surprised that nobody mentioned os.scandir:

def count_files(dir):
    return len([1 for x in list(os.scandir(dir)) if x.is_file()])
1
  • 1
    Works great with Python 3.6! Feb 13, 2018 at 10:04
13
def directory(path,extension):
  list_dir = []
  list_dir = os.listdir(path)
  count = 0
  for file in list_dir:
    if file.endswith(extension): # eg: '.txt'
      count += 1
  return count
13
import os
print len(os.listdir(os.getcwd()))
1
  • 4
    This might be useful sometimes but it includes subdirectories in the count also Jul 25, 2016 at 21:22
10

This uses os.listdir and works for any directory:

import os
directory = 'mydirpath'

number_of_files = len([item for item in os.listdir(directory) if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(directory, item))])

this can be simplified with a generator and made a little bit faster with:

import os
isfile = os.path.isfile
join = os.path.join

directory = 'mydirpath'
number_of_files = sum(1 for item in os.listdir(directory) if isfile(join(directory, item)))
0
9

While I agree with the answer provided by @DanielStutzbach: os.listdir() will be slightly more efficient than using glob.glob.

However, an extra precision, if you do want to count the number of specific files in folder, you want to use len(glob.glob()). For instance if you were to count all the pdfs in a folder you want to use:

pdfCounter = len(glob.glob1(myPath,"*.pdf"))
7

This is an easy solution that counts the number of files in a directory containing sub-folders. It may come in handy:

import os
from pathlib import Path

def count_files(rootdir):
    '''counts the number of files in each subfolder in a directory'''
    for path in pathlib.Path(rootdir).iterdir():
        if path.is_dir():
            print("There are " + str(len([name for name in os.listdir(path) \
            if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(path, name))])) + " files in " + \
            str(path.name))
            
 
count_files(data_dir) # data_dir is the directory you want files counted.

You should get an output similar to this (with the placeholders changed, of course):

There are {number of files} files in {name of sub-folder1}
There are {number of files} files in {name of sub-folder2}
6
def count_em(valid_path):
   x = 0
   for root, dirs, files in os.walk(valid_path):
       for f in files:
            x = x+1
print "There are", x, "files in this directory."
return x

Taked from this post

1
  • 2
    1. files is a list. 2. OP is not looking for recursive count Apr 13, 2010 at 18:56
6

one liner and recursive:

def count_files(path):
    return sum([len(files) for _, _, files in os.walk(path)])

count_files('path/to/dir')
5
import os

def count_files(in_directory):
    joiner= (in_directory + os.path.sep).__add__
    return sum(
        os.path.isfile(filename)
        for filename
        in map(joiner, os.listdir(in_directory))
    )

>>> count_files("/usr/lib")
1797
>>> len(os.listdir("/usr/lib"))
2049
5

Here is a simple one-line command that I found useful:

print int(os.popen("ls | wc -l").read())
1
  • Parsing the output of ls is generally frowned upon (it can frequently cause issues), though this is not a bad "quick-and-dirty" method at the shell. You should use ls -1, though, so it guarantees one line per file.
    – Bloodgain
    Apr 3, 2020 at 22:45
4

Luke's code reformat.

import os

print len(os.walk('/usr/lib').next()[2])
1
  • Gives me AttributeError: 'generator' object has no attribute 'next' in Python 3.11
    – Milind R
    Jan 2 at 6:39
2

I used glob.iglob for a directory structure similar to

data
└───train
│   └───subfolder1
│   |   │   file111.png
│   |   │   file112.png
│   |   │   ...
│   |
│   └───subfolder2
│       │   file121.png
│       │   file122.png
│       │   ...
└───test
    │   file221.png
    │   file222.png

Both of the following options return 4 (as expected, i.e. does not count the subfolders themselves)

  • len(list(glob.iglob("data/train/*/*.png", recursive=True)))
  • sum(1 for i in glob.iglob("data/train/*/*.png"))
2

It is simple:

print(len([iq for iq in os.scandir('PATH')]))

it simply counts number of files in directory , i have used list comprehension technique to iterate through specific directory returning all files in return . "len(returned list)" returns number of files.

2
  • 1
    Welcome to Stack Overflow. The quality of this answer can be improved by adding an explanation: How to Answer
    – Elletlar
    Jul 29, 2018 at 10:44
  • 1
    Thankyou Elletlar , i have edited my answer , i will make sure to respond in more comprehensive manner :D
    – Agha Saad
    Jul 31, 2018 at 15:05
1
import os

total_con=os.listdir('<directory path>')

files=[]

for f_n in total_con:
   if os.path.isfile(f_n):
     files.append(f_n)


print len(files)
1
  • The OP asked for the number of files, this lists directories as well.
    – tktk
    Sep 29, 2014 at 6:19
1

If you'll be using the standard shell of the operating system, you can get the result much faster rather than using pure pythonic way.

Example for Windows:

import os
import subprocess

def get_num_files(path):
    cmd = 'DIR \"%s\" /A-D /B /S | FIND /C /V ""' % path
    return int(subprocess.check_output(cmd, shell=True))
1
  • 1
    But it won't be as portable.
    – Politank-Z
    Apr 8, 2015 at 13:48
1

I found another answer which may be correct as accepted answer.

for root, dirs, files in os.walk(input_path):    
for name in files:
    if os.path.splitext(name)[1] == '.TXT' or os.path.splitext(name)[1] == '.txt':
        datafiles.append(os.path.join(root,name)) 


print len(files) 
1

A simple utility function I wrote that makes use of os.scandir() instead of os.listdir().

import os 

def count_files_in_dir(path: str) -> int:
    file_entries = [entry for entry in os.scandir(path) if entry.is_file()]

    return len(file_entries)

The main benefit is that, the need for os.path.is_file() is eliminated and replaced with os.DirEntry instance's is_file() which also removes the need for os.path.join(DIR, file_name) as shown in other answers.

0

i did this and this returned the number of files in the folder(Attack_Data)...this works fine.

import os
def fcount(path):
    #Counts the number of files in a directory
    count = 0
    for f in os.listdir(path):
        if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(path, f)):
            count += 1

    return count
path = r"C:\Users\EE EKORO\Desktop\Attack_Data" #Read files in folder
print (fcount(path))
0
0

Simpler one:

import os
number_of_files = len(os.listdir(directory))
print(number_of_files)
1
  • This solution counts also directories, not only files as it was indicated in question.
    – maciejwww
    Feb 9, 2023 at 14:16
0

I find that sometimes I don't know if I will receive filenames or the path to the file. So I printed the os walk solution output:

def count_number_of_raw_data_point_files(path: Union[str, Path], with_file_prefix: str) -> int:
    import os
    path: Path = force_expanduser(path)

    _, _, files = next(os.walk(path))
    # file_count = len(files)
    filename: str
    count: int = 0
    for filename in files:
        print(f'-->{filename=}')  # e.g. print -->filename='data_point_99.json'
        if with_file_prefix in filename:
            count += 1
    return count

out:

-->filename='data_point_780.json'
-->filename='data_point_781.json'
-->filename='data_point_782.json'
-->filename='data_point_783.json'
-->filename='data_point_784.json'
-->filename='data_point_785.json'
-->filename='data_point_786.json'
-->filename='data_point_787.json'
-->filename='data_point_788.json'
-->filename='data_point_789.json'
-->filename='data_point_79.json'
-->filename='data_point_790.json'
-->filename='data_point_791.json'
-->filename='data_point_792.json'
-->filename='data_point_793.json'
-->filename='data_point_794.json'
-->filename='data_point_795.json'
-->filename='data_point_796.json'
-->filename='data_point_797.json'
-->filename='data_point_798.json'
-->filename='data_point_799.json'
-->filename='data_point_8.json'
-->filename='data_point_80.json'
-->filename='data_point_800.json'
-->filename='data_point_801.json'
-->filename='data_point_802.json'
-->filename='data_point_803.json'
-->filename='data_point_804.json'
-->filename='data_point_805.json'
-->filename='data_point_806.json'
-->filename='data_point_807.json'
-->filename='data_point_808.json'
-->filename='data_point_809.json'
-->filename='data_point_81.json'
-->filename='data_point_810.json'
-->filename='data_point_811.json'
-->filename='data_point_812.json'
-->filename='data_point_813.json'
-->filename='data_point_814.json'
-->filename='data_point_815.json'
-->filename='data_point_816.json'
-->filename='data_point_817.json'
-->filename='data_point_818.json'
-->filename='data_point_819.json'
-->filename='data_point_82.json'
-->filename='data_point_820.json'
-->filename='data_point_821.json'
-->filename='data_point_822.json'
-->filename='data_point_823.json'
-->filename='data_point_824.json'
-->filename='data_point_825.json'
-->filename='data_point_826.json'
-->filename='data_point_827.json'
-->filename='data_point_828.json'
-->filename='data_point_829.json'
-->filename='data_point_83.json'
-->filename='data_point_830.json'
-->filename='data_point_831.json'
-->filename='data_point_832.json'
-->filename='data_point_833.json'
-->filename='data_point_834.json'
-->filename='data_point_835.json'
-->filename='data_point_836.json'
-->filename='data_point_837.json'
-->filename='data_point_838.json'
-->filename='data_point_839.json'
-->filename='data_point_84.json'
-->filename='data_point_840.json'
-->filename='data_point_841.json'
-->filename='data_point_842.json'
-->filename='data_point_843.json'
-->filename='data_point_844.json'
-->filename='data_point_845.json'
-->filename='data_point_846.json'
-->filename='data_point_847.json'
-->filename='data_point_848.json'
-->filename='data_point_849.json'
-->filename='data_point_85.json'
-->filename='data_point_850.json'
-->filename='data_point_851.json'
-->filename='data_point_852.json'
-->filename='data_point_853.json'
-->filename='data_point_86.json'
-->filename='data_point_87.json'
-->filename='data_point_88.json'
-->filename='data_point_89.json'
-->filename='data_point_9.json'
-->filename='data_point_90.json'
-->filename='data_point_91.json'
-->filename='data_point_92.json'
-->filename='data_point_93.json'
-->filename='data_point_94.json'
-->filename='data_point_95.json'
-->filename='data_point_96.json'
-->filename='data_point_97.json'
-->filename='data_point_98.json'
-->filename='data_point_99.json'
854

note you might have to sort.

0

I would like to extend the reply from @Mr_and_Mrs_D:

import os
folder = 'C:/Dropbox'
file_count = sum(len(files) for _, _, files in os.walk(folder))
print(file_count)

This counts all the files in the folder and its subfolders. However, if you want to do some filtering - like only counting the files ending in .svg, you can do:

import os
file_count = sum(len([f for f in files if f.endswith('.svg')]) for _, _, files in os.walk(folder))
print(file_count)

You basically replace:

  • len(files)

with:

  • len([f for f in files if f.endswith('.svg')])
-2

Convert it to a list, after that you can make use of the len() function:

len(list(glob.glob('*')))

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