162

I have a simple script which parses a file and loads it's contents to a database. I don't need a UI, but right now I'm prompting the user for the file to parse using raw_input which is most unfriendly, especially because the user can't copy/paste the path. I would like a quick and easy way to present a file selection dialog to the user, they can select the file, and then it's loaded to the database. (In my use case, if they happened to chose the wrong file, it would fail parsing, and wouldn't be a problem even if it was loaded to the database.)

import tkFileDialog
file_path_string = tkFileDialog.askopenfilename()

This code is close to what I want, but it leaves an annoying empty frame open (which isn't able to be closed, probably because I haven't registered a close event handler).

I don't have to use tkInter, but since it's in the Python standard library it's a good candidate for quickest and easiest solution.

Whats a quick and easy way to prompt for a file or filename in a script without any other UI?

2
  • 1
    "but right now I'm prompting the user for the file to parse using raw_input which is most unfriendly, especially because the user can't copy/paste the path." I can't understand this. It is perfectly possible to copy and paste text from and into any ordinary terminal window. It just doesn't necessarily use the keyboard shortcuts you're accustomed to from GUI programs. Feb 17, 2023 at 1:07
  • Appears to be duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3579568 Sep 25, 2023 at 0:34

9 Answers 9

331

Tkinter is the easiest way if you don't want to have any other dependencies. To show only the dialog without any other GUI elements, you have to hide the root window using the withdraw method:

import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import filedialog

root = tk.Tk()
root.withdraw()

file_path = filedialog.askopenfilename()

Python 2 variant:

import Tkinter, tkFileDialog

root = Tkinter.Tk()
root.withdraw()

file_path = tkFileDialog.askopenfilename()
13
  • 6
    This should be the accepted answer. It's simple, effective, and as long as you're not creating new Tk root windows over and over, it's fine (and not to mention that it's exactly the answer I was looking for when I came across this thread).
    – Andrew
    Jan 15, 2013 at 12:45
  • 2
    I just used this for my work as well. It works fine on Fedora, but on Ubuntu it messes up any matplotlib figures that follow. Pretty much after pylab.show() it hangs. I'm still able to type in the terminal, but nothing happens. Also cpu goes to 0% for my program. Any advice?
    – Diana
    Jul 2, 2013 at 20:00
  • 22
    On python3: tkinter.filedialog.askopenfilename()
    – jfs
    Mar 3, 2014 at 20:37
  • 10
    On python2: import Tkinter as tk and import tkFileDialog and file_path = tkFileDialog.askopenfilename()
    – SaschaH
    Jun 8, 2016 at 17:15
  • 10
    This does not work well on MacOS: the dialog opens but becomes unresponsive and the whole script hangs. Jun 14, 2017 at 7:49
36

You can use easygui:

import easygui

path = easygui.fileopenbox()

To install easygui, you can use pip:

pip3 install easygui

It is a single pure Python module (easygui.py) that uses tkinter.

6
  • 13
    easygui project has shut down, not further maintained -- it currently throws an error/exception when running on Python 3.5, perhaps consider other options
    – pepe
    Jun 18, 2016 at 18:04
  • 2
    @pepe: I don't see any notice in the project repository (the latest commit is May 15)
    – jfs
    Jun 18, 2016 at 18:35
  • good to know, thx, perhaps someone picked it up: see easygui.wordpress.com/2013/03/06/easygui-project-shuts-down-2
    – pepe
    Jun 18, 2016 at 18:42
  • @Zanam obviously it does work. But there could be bugs.
    – jfs
    Oct 9, 2016 at 18:14
  • 1
    this works on python 3.10 for easygui Feb 27, 2022 at 4:09
27

Try with wxPython:

import wx

def get_path(wildcard):
    app = wx.App(None)
    style = wx.FD_OPEN | wx.FD_FILE_MUST_EXIST
    dialog = wx.FileDialog(None, 'Open', wildcard=wildcard, style=style)
    if dialog.ShowModal() == wx.ID_OK:
        path = dialog.GetPath()
    else:
        path = None
    dialog.Destroy()
    return path

print get_path('*.txt')
10

pywin32 provides access to the GetOpenFileName win32 function. From the example

import win32gui, win32con, os

file_types = "Python Scripts\0*.py;*.pyw;*.pys\0Text files\0*.txt\0"
customfilter = "Other file types\0*.*\0"
fname, customfilter, flags = win32gui.GetOpenFileNameW(
    InitialDir=os.environ["temp"],
    Flags=win32con.OFN_ALLOWMULTISELECT | win32con.OFN_EXPLORER,
    File="somefilename",
    DefExt="py",
    Title="GetOpenFileNameW",
    Filter=file_types,
    CustomFilter=customfilter,
    FilterIndex=0,
)

print("open file names:", repr(fname))
print("filter used:", repr(customfilter))
print("Flags:", flags)

for k, v in win32con.__dict__.items():
    if k.startswith("OFN_") and flags & v:
        print("\t" + k)
5
  • 1
    This changed my current working directory, to the directory from which the files are picked. What to do in that case?
    – Mooncrater
    Sep 4, 2020 at 6:57
  • 2
    @Mooncrater add |win32con.OFN_NOCHANGEDIR to Flags, but beware of caveat stackoverflow.com/questions/50468051/… Sep 4, 2020 at 14:38
  • Hey, thanks for the suggestion. What I ended up doing is reverting to the original directory, every time I used GetOpenFileNameW.
    – Mooncrater
    Sep 5, 2020 at 15:32
  • How could I change the initial directory? Modifying 'InitialDir' value to 'C:/Users/abcde/Documents' doesn't work
    – gunardilin
    Feb 17, 2022 at 17:24
  • @gunardilin Use backslashes Feb 18, 2022 at 15:06
8

Using tkinter (python 2) or Tkinter (python 3) it's indeed possible to display file open dialog (See other answers here). Please notice however that user interface of that dialog is outdated and does not corresponds to newer file open dialogs available in Windows 10.

Moreover - if you're looking on way to embedd python support into your own application - you will find out soon that tkinter library is not open source code and even more - it is commercial library.

(For example search for "activetcl pricing" will lead you to this web page: https://reviews.financesonline.com/p/activetcl/)

So tkinter library will cost money for any application wanting to embedd python.

I by myself managed to find pythonnet library:

(MIT License)

Using following command it's possible to install pythonnet:

pip3 install pythonnet

And here you can find out working example for using open file dialog:

https://stackoverflow.com/a/50446803/2338477

Let me copy an example also here:

import sys
import ctypes
co_initialize = ctypes.windll.ole32.CoInitialize
#   Force STA mode
co_initialize(None)

import clr 

clr.AddReference('System.Windows.Forms')

from System.Windows.Forms import OpenFileDialog

file_dialog = OpenFileDialog()
ret = file_dialog.ShowDialog()
if ret != 1:
    print("Cancelled")
    sys.exit()

print(file_dialog.FileName)

If you also miss more complex user interface - see Demo folder in pythonnet git.

I'm not sure about portability to other OS's, haven't tried, but .net 5 is planned to be ported to multiple OS's (Search ".net 5 platforms", https://devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/introducing-net-5/ ) - so this technology is also future proof.

6
  • 1
    this solution is only for Windows. Install on linux .NET. o just use FileOpen dialog from python? Laughable...
    – Reishin
    Feb 21, 2021 at 23:29
  • Haven't tried yet. python .net needs to be ported to .net core, and after that also file open dialog as well. Not sure when this will happen. Need to try out what current technologies are offering. Feb 22, 2021 at 9:35
  • 1
    Can you please reference to the source that says that Tkinter uses ActiveTcl and has therefore the licence conditions you mention? Jan 4, 2022 at 21:31
  • This is not the case anymore with Python 3.9 on Windows 10, askopenfile does raise the modern open file dialog (actually its just a newer COM control, so you didn't even need the pythonnet dependency, also AFAIK, .NET Core 3.1 started using the newer control its in the Microsoft.Win32 namespace)
    – demberto
    Feb 13, 2022 at 6:53
  • 1
    The info saying you must pay for commercial use of TKinter is incorrect. The link pointed to is for ActiveTCL. ActiveState has a whole line of ActiveTCL, ActivePERL, ActivePython, etc., that provide commercial support for these languages, and extended support for out-of-date versions. If you have a Python 2.7 app, not going to port it to Python 3.x, but work at a company that requires all software to be formally supported, then you pay for ActivePython 2.7 and you have your support. (From what I've read, they truly do port security fixes and such back to these versions.)
    – hwertz
    Apr 15, 2022 at 19:59
6

If you don't need the UI or expect the program to run in a CLI, you could parse the filepath as an argument. This would allow you to use the autocomplete feature of your CLI to quickly find the file you need.

This would probably only be handy if the script is non-interactive besides the filepath input.

3
  • 1
    This is a valid solution, although I feel sad inside every time I have to use the Windows command line. I'm in a Windows environment.
    – Buttons840
    Feb 16, 2012 at 21:49
  • 3
    I see. The CLI in Windows is so bad compared to Unix. I see why a file picker would be neat. I guess maybe drag-and-dropping the file onto the script and then reading the filename as the argument? (mindlesstechnology.wordpress.com/2008/03/29/…) That would make it alot easier if it doesn't involve physically copying the file first. I'm not on a Windows box ATM so i can't test how it behaves. You could easily deploy the registry hack in a .reg file if you need to install it on several machines.
    – SQDK
    Feb 16, 2012 at 22:47
  • 1
    Alternatively you can have a .bat file pass the filename to the script as an argument. This doesn't involve any registry hacks.
    – SQDK
    Feb 16, 2012 at 22:52
5

Another os-agnostic option, use pywebview:

import webview

def webview_file_dialog():
    file = None
    def open_file_dialog(w):
        nonlocal file
        try:
            file = w.create_file_dialog(webview.OPEN_DIALOG)[0]
        except TypeError:
            pass  # user exited file dialog without picking
        finally:
            w.destroy()
    window = webview.create_window("", hidden=True)
    webview.start(open_file_dialog, window)
    # file will either be a string or None
    return file

print(webview_file_dialog())

Environment: python3.8.6 on Mac - though I've used pywebview on windows 10 before.

1
  • tried to install with pip3 but it won't on my M1 under Ventura Version 13.6.2 (22G320. Too bad
    – qwerty_so
    Dec 26, 2023 at 19:07
1

I just stumbled on this little trick for Windows only: run powershell.exe from subprocess.

import subprocess

sys_const = ssfDESKTOP # Starts at the top level
# sys_const = 0x2a # Correct value for "Program Files (0x86)" folder
powershell_browse = "(new-object -COM 'Shell.Application')."
powershell_browse += "BrowseForFolder(0,'window title here',0,sys_const).self.path"

ret = subprocess.run(["powershell.exe",powershell_browse], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
print(ret.stdout.decode())

Note the optional use of system folder constants. (There's an obscure typo in shldisp.h that the "Program Files (0x86)" constant was assigned wrong. I added a comment with the correct value. Took me a bit to figure that one out.)

More info below:

System folder constants

3
  • ssfDESKTOP is not defined. Is there another import you used?
    – Dave Sims
    Sep 29, 2023 at 15:48
  • I treated ssfDESKTOP as a string, and also tried feeding in the 0x2a, neither of which worked, but when I used a full path in place of either of those it did work. Side note, this is the only answer that works with an out of the box python install and doesn't require installing other packages/modules
    – Dave Sims
    Sep 29, 2023 at 15:49
  • Actually, I spoke to soon. The OP is asking for a solution to select a file, this only allows you to select folder and won't even look inside them unless they contain folders. I found a working solution with PowerShell though thanks to you :)
    – Dave Sims
    Sep 29, 2023 at 16:31
-1

If you don't want to install any of the modules referenced above, you can use the out of the box subprocess module to accomplish this via PowerShell like so:

import subprocess

PS_Commands = "Add-Type -AssemblyName System.Windows.Forms;"
PS_Commands += "$fileBrowser = New-Object System.Windows.Forms.OpenFileDialog;"
PS_Commands += "$Null = $fileBrowser.ShowDialog();"
PS_Commands += "echo $fileBrowser.FileName"
file_path = subprocess.run(["powershell.exe", PS_Commands], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
file_path = file_path.stdout.decode()
file_path = file_path.rstrip()
print(file_path)
0

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