410

I have a text file. How can I check whether it's empty or not?

0

12 Answers 12

511
>>> import os
>>> os.stat("file").st_size == 0
True
9
  • 3
    that's fine too. but i don't want to import stat. Its short and sweet enough and the size position in the returned list is not going to change anytime soon.
    – ghostdog74
    Mar 24, 2010 at 13:48
  • 9
    Note that the file types work for json, too. Sometimes, json.load() for empty file doesn't work and this provides a good way to handle that case Mar 23, 2016 at 4:14
  • what if the file only contain new line / empty? wrong answer!
    – greendino
    Jun 5, 2020 at 0:41
  • 6
    @lone_coder It's not actually empty if it has a newline character in it.
    – sappjw
    Sep 8, 2020 at 18:43
  • 1
    @lone_coder this gives me 1: echo -en '\n' >/tmp/nl; python -c 'import os; print(os.stat("/tmp/nl").st_size)'
    – sappjw
    Sep 9, 2020 at 18:37
160
import os    
os.path.getsize(fullpathhere) > 0
6
  • 8
    For safety you may need to catch OSError and return False.
    – kennytm
    Mar 24, 2010 at 13:09
  • 9
    What is the difference/advantage using this vs os.state('file').st_size? Nov 25, 2017 at 0:30
  • 4
    Looks like the two are the same under the hood: stackoverflow.com/a/18962257/1397061
    – 1''
    Feb 7, 2018 at 6:29
  • This returns 20 even the file is empty
    – alper
    Jan 3, 2021 at 19:17
  • 4
    @alper 20 is the size of a gzipped empty file. If your file was truly empty, with ls -l (or dir on windows) reporting a size of 0, os.path.getsize() should also return 0.
    – joanis
    Sep 13, 2021 at 14:20
93

Both getsize() and stat() will throw an exception if the file does not exist. This function will return True/False - usually without throwing:

import os
def is_non_zero_file(fpath):  
    return os.path.isfile(fpath) and os.path.getsize(fpath) > 0

There is a race condition because the file may be removed between the calls to os.path.isfile(fpath) and os.path.getsize(fpath), in which case the proposed function will still raise an exception

4
  • Definitely like using os.path.getsize()
    – David Gay
    Nov 19, 2013 at 22:05
  • 21
    There is a race condition because the file may be removed between the calls to os.path.isfile(fpath) and os.path.getsize(fpath), in which case the proposed function will raise an exception.
    – s3rvac
    May 4, 2017 at 9:10
  • 5
    Better to try and catch the OSError instead, like proposed in another comment.
    – j08lue
    May 4, 2017 at 13:23
  • Also need to catch TypeError which will be raised in the event that the input fpath is None.
    – Trutane
    Sep 19, 2019 at 0:17
57

If you are using Python 3 with pathlib you can access os.stat() information using the Path.stat() method, which has the attribute st_size (file size in bytes):

>>> from pathlib import Path
>>> mypath = Path("path/to/my/file")
>>> mypath.stat().st_size == 0 # True if empty
39

If for some reason you already had the file open, you could try this:

>>> with open('New Text Document.txt') as my_file:
...     # I already have file open at this point.. now what?
...     my_file.seek(0) # Ensure you're at the start of the file..
...     first_char = my_file.read(1) # Get the first character
...     if not first_char:
...         print "file is empty" # The first character is the empty string..
...     else:
...         my_file.seek(0) # The first character wasn't empty. Return to the start of the file.
...         # Use file now
...
file is empty
1
  • exactly the scenario which i had.. after checking the file, the pointer skipped the first char and i was confused on the final output.... thanks for this... Nov 9, 2021 at 21:14
17

if you have the file object, then

>>> import os
>>> with open('new_file.txt') as my_file:
...     my_file.seek(0, os.SEEK_END) # go to end of file
...     if my_file.tell(): # if current position is truish (i.e != 0)
...         my_file.seek(0) # rewind the file for later use 
...     else:
...         print "file is empty"
... 
file is empty
2
  • 2
    This answer is should have more votes because it actually checks whether the file has any contents at all.
    – amanb
    Jul 19, 2019 at 16:41
  • @amanb In which cases it will report something different than os.stat("file").st_size == 0? Mar 10 at 11:37
12

Combining ghostdog74's answer and the comments:

>>> import os
>>> os.stat('c:/pagefile.sys').st_size==0
False

False means a non-empty file.

So let's write a function:

import os

def file_is_empty(path):
    return os.stat(path).st_size==0
4

An important gotcha: a compressed empty file will appear to be non-zero when tested with getsize() or stat() functions:

$ python
>>> import os
>>> os.path.getsize('empty-file.txt.gz')
35
>>> os.stat("empty-file.txt.gz").st_size == 0
False

$ gzip -cd empty-file.txt.gz | wc
0 0 0

So you should check whether the file to be tested is compressed (e.g. examine the filename suffix) and if so, either bail or uncompress it to a temporary location, test the uncompressed file, and then delete it when done.

Better way to test size of compressed files: read it directly using the appropriate compression module. You would only need to read the first line of the file, for example.

1
  • 1
    a nice gotcha you introduced here!
    – Ron Klein
    Feb 8, 2022 at 9:24
3

Since you have not defined what an empty file is: Some might also consider a file with just blank lines as an empty file. So if you want to check if your file contains only blank lines (any white space character, '\r', '\n', '\t'), you can follow the example below:

Python 3

import re

def whitespace_only(file):
    content = open(file, 'r').read()
    if re.search(r'^\s*$', content):
        return True

Explanation: the example above uses a regular expression (regex) to match the content (content) of the file.

Specifically: for a regex of: ^\s*$ as a whole means if the file contains only blank lines and/or blank spaces.

  • ^ asserts position at start of a line
  • \s matches any white space character (equal to [\r\n\t\f\v ])
  • * Quantifier — Matches between zero and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy)
  • $ asserts position at the end of a line
2
  • 5
    I downvoted because 1- there’s no need to define an empty file: it’s a file with no content. A file that contains blank lines is not empty. 2- this reads the whole file in memory.
    – bfontaine
    Jan 22, 2021 at 10:58
  • 2
    I think this is BAD answer as well. Because it works only for really blank files. But as soon as file is not blank you could face with many errors, one of them UnicodeDecodeError. Be careful to use this solution.
    – hotenov
    May 24, 2021 at 8:53
2

An easy simple method I used recently is this:

f = open('test.txt', 'w+')

f.seek(0) #Unecessary but important if file was manipulated before reading
if f.read() == '':
    print("no data found")
else:
    print("Data present in file")

You can use the above as inspiration for your desired uses (keeping in mind I am pretty new to file handling this seemed to suit my desired use in a program I was writing).

1
  • seek(0) saves my day!
    – Toma
    Feb 22 at 7:54
1

If you want to check if a CSV file is empty or not, try this:

with open('file.csv', 'a', newline='') as f:
    csv_writer = DictWriter(f, fieldnames = ['user_name', 'user_age', 'user_email', 'user_gender', 'user_type', 'user_check'])
    if os.stat('file.csv').st_size > 0:
        pass
    else:
        csv_writer.writeheader()
0
0

There is a simpler way not using the os library:

with open('filename') as myfile:
    if len(myfile.readlines()):
        print("It's not empty")

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.