Say I have a python file in directory e like this:

/a/b/c/d/e/file.py

Under directory e I have a few folders I want to access but if file.py is executed from anywhere else rather than from folder e the relative path won't work for me. Also folder e could be located anywhere but always with the a set of sub folders so absolute path will not work.

First, is there any function to get the absolute path in relation to the source files location?

If not, any ideas how to sort this out? Grab the command line used and add the CWD together?

My problem here is that this folder are being installed on 20 different machines and OS's and I want it to be as dynamic as possible with little configurations and "rules" where it has to be installed etc.

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2 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted
# in /a/b/c/d/e/file.py
import os
os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) # /a/b/c/d/e
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docs.python.org/library/os.path.html also look at abspath – F.C. Aug 23 '11 at 14:24
Thanks a million, easier than I thought it would be! – StefanE Aug 23 '11 at 14:25
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Here is my solution which (a) gets the .py file rather than the .pyc file, and (b) sorts out symlinks.

Working on Linux, the .py files are often symlinked to another place, and the .pyc files are generated in the directory next to the symlinked py files. To find the real path of the source file, here's part of a script that I use to find the source path.

try:
    modpath = module.__file__
except AttributeError:
    sys.exit('Module does not have __file__ defined.')
    # It's a script for me, you probably won't want to wrap it in try..except

# Turn pyc files into py files if we can
if modpath.endswith('.pyc') and os.path.exists(modpath[:-1]):
    modpath = modpath[:-1]

# Sort out symlinks
modpath = os.path.realpath(modpath)
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