182

I have a php page inside a folder on my website.

I need to add the name of the current directory into a variable for example:

$myVar = current_directory_name;

Is this possible?

9 Answers 9

337
getcwd();

or

dirname(__FILE__);

or (PHP5)

basename(__DIR__) 

http://php.net/manual/en/function.getcwd.php

http://php.net/manual/en/function.dirname.php

You can use basename() to get the trailing part of the path :)

In your case, I'd say you are most likely looking to use getcwd(), dirname(__FILE__) is more useful when you have a file that needs to include another library and is included in another library.

Eg:

main.php
libs/common.php
libs/images/editor.php

In your common.php you need to use functions in editor.php, so you use

common.php:

require_once dirname(__FILE__) . '/images/editor.php';

main.php:

require_once libs/common.php

That way when common.php is require'd in main.php, the call of require_once in common.php will correctly includes editor.php in images/editor.php instead of trying to look in current directory where main.php is run.

5
  • 5
    And basename(__DIR__) in PHP 5
    – Xeoncross
    Apr 3, 2012 at 16:30
  • This is giving me the whole path. Is there a way of getting just the directory name?
    – Satch3000
    Apr 3, 2012 at 16:56
  • 18
    @Satch3000 basename(getcwd()) Apr 3, 2012 at 17:04
  • 4
    Note that if you use an include or a required, __DIR__ is the path of the included file and NOT the current directory Feb 16, 2015 at 12:41
  • This is a bit misleading. __DIR__ is basically equivalent to dirname(__FILE__) (stackoverflow.com/a/2749423/446106). basename(__DIR__) is not.
    – mwfearnley
    Jan 10, 2023 at 12:26
33

To get only the name of the directory where script executed:

//Path to script: /data/html/cars/index.php
echo basename(dirname(__FILE__)); //"cars"
20

You can use dirname(__FILE__) to get the path to the directory of the current file.

Example: /path_to/your_dir/your_file.php:

// use dirname to get the directory of the current file
$path = dirname(__FILE__);
// $path here is now /path_to/your_dir

// split directory into array of pieces
$pieces = explode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR, $path);
// $pieces = ['path_to', 'your_dir']

// get the last piece
echo $pieces[count($pieces) - 1];
// result is: your_dir
2
  • 3
    The OP seems to have already accepted an answer to their problem. Although you've clearly added value, do you need to vent your furstrations here?
    – Dutts
    Mar 14, 2013 at 11:01
  • stackoverflow.com/help/formatting will explain how to make things bold avoiding the use of caps, which you have quite rightly pointed out denotes shouting on the internet.
    – Dutts
    Jun 27, 2013 at 13:59
13
echo basename(__DIR__); will return the current directory name only
echo basename(__FILE__); will return the current file name only
1
7

Actually I found the best solution is the following:

$cur_dir = explode('\\', getcwd());
echo $cur_dir[count($cur_dir)-1];

if your dir is www\var\path\ Current_Path

then this returns Current_path

1
  • 4
    Watch out, in Linux servers we do not use backslash but the slash. PHP has a magic constant to make it cross platform, see PATH_SEPARATOR
    – renoirb
    Aug 22, 2014 at 15:35
4

$myVar = str_replace('/', '', $_SERVER[REQUEST_URI]);

libs/images/index.php
Result: images

0
4

To get the names of current directory we can use getcwd() or dirname(__FILE__) but getcwd() and dirname(__FILE__) are not synonymous. They do exactly what their names are. If your code is running by referring a class in another file which exists in some other directory then these both methods will return different results.

For example if I am calling a class, from where these two functions are invoked and the class exists in some /controller/goodclass.php from /index.php then getcwd() will return / and dirname(__FILE__) will return /controller.

0

I use this line to get the actual file directory name without the path. (For windows)

substr(dirname(__FILE__), strrpos(dirname(__FILE__), '\\') + 1)

I changed it a bit to work on Linux also

substr(dirname(__FILE__), strrpos(str_replace('\\', '/', dirname(__FILE__)), '/') + 1)
0

basename(getcwd()); // returns only the current working dir name.

1
  • 1
    FYI: This question is rather old and a good and accepted answer has already been posted the very same day, including a comment with your exact answer: stackoverflow.com/a/9997400/801652 Be sure to read all the answers before posting one yourself with the same content Mar 4, 2022 at 11:20

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