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So I let a user to set a path to a directory that may contain subdirectories (more levels), and files.

I use os.walk() in my code to scan the whole directory:

for root, subdirs, files in os.walk(thispath):
  for myfile in files:
    shutil.move(os.path.realpath(myfile), os.path.join(thispath,filename))

but "os.path.realpath(myfile)" instead of giving me the absolute path of "myfile" (I also tried "os.path.abspath(myfile)" but does the same thing basically), gives me the path from where the script is running; just like a os.chdir() with attached the myfile filename. basically os.path.realpath(myfile) = os.path.join(os.chdir(),myfile), whereas myfile is obviously in a any other random directory, so it shouldn't be.

When I try to move that file it says that it doesn't exist, and it's true, it is not in the path it goes to look.

How do I get the absolute path of the file I am walking on ("myfile")?

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  • 1
    ... What did you possibly think root was for? Oct 6, 2011 at 23:27
  • thank you. I thought it was much harder so I tried everything else
    – Danny
    Oct 6, 2011 at 23:32

1 Answer 1

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for root, subdirs, files in os.walk(this_path):
  for my_file in files:
    shutil.move(os.path.join(root, my_file), os.path.join(this_path, filename))

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