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I'm not able to see the bigger picture here I think; but basically I have no idea why you would use os.path.join instead of just normal string concatenation?

I have mainly used VBScript so I don't understand the point of this function.

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3 Answers 3

116

Portable

Write filepath manipulations once and it works across many different platforms, for free. The delimiting character is abstracted away, making your job easier.

Smart

You no longer need to worry if that directory path had a trailing slash or not. os.path.join will add it if it needs to.

Clear

Using os.path.join makes it obvious to other people reading your code that you are working with filepaths. People can quickly scan through the code and discover it's a filepath intrinsically. If you decide to construct it yourself, you will likely detract the reader from finding actual problems with your code: "Hmm, some string concats, a substitution. Is this a filepath or what? Gah! Why didn't he use os.path.join?" :)

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    Thanks. The Smart and Clear parts are exactly the kind of reasoning I was looking for when asking that same question to myself: the portable part is easily attained by concatenation with "/" instead of windows-only "\" so it is kind of moot. Jul 2, 2016 at 11:12
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    point 3 has merit, but 1 and 2 are moot. / works on Windows. What OS are you ever using that doesn't support it? And double trailing slashes are normalised for you by the OS/FS. I'm not saying don't use os.path.join, but if you do, do it for the right reasons. There is a lot of cargo-culting around os.path.join. "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds," as they say.
    – hraban
    May 3, 2017 at 10:46
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    What about in terms of computation speed?
    – haneulkim
    May 13, 2021 at 3:37
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    If you are simply joining a path to a file, you should use path + '/' + file. This is imminently readable and portable to all OS. Using os.path.join is hazardous because it is inconsistent. For example os.path.join('/foo/bar','test') will return /foo/bar/test on some systems and /foo/bar\\test on others. Mar 2, 2022 at 15:49
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    They are not fully equivalent however. Consider os.path.join('a', '/b'), which actually returns /b. So if you're mixing these methods, or converting from string concatenation to os.path.join, make sure path components don't unexpectedly have a leading slash.
    – ketil
    Mar 24 at 6:50
5

Will work on Windows with '\' and Unix (including Mac OS X) with '/'.

for posixpath here's the straightforward code

In [22]: os.path.join??
Type:       function
String Form:<function join at 0x107c28ed8>
File:       /usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.3/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/posixpath.py
Definition: os.path.join(a, *p)
Source:
def join(a, *p):
    """Join two or more pathname components, inserting '/' as needed.
    If any component is an absolute path, all previous path components
    will be discarded."""
    path = a
    for b in p:
        if b.startswith('/'):
            path = b
        elif path == '' or path.endswith('/'):
            path +=  b
        else:
            path += '/' + b
    return path

don't have windows but the same should be there with '\'

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    Strangely enough, though, using / works on Windows, with CPython… Dec 19, 2012 at 1:51
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    This. Why would you try and handle path separators etc yourself when there is a function designed to do it for you?
    – Blair
    Dec 19, 2012 at 1:51
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    I read the comments and it joins paths together, i just cannot see why I would ever use it, apologies as like i said I'm clearly not seeing the bigger picture. Dec 19, 2012 at 1:52
  • @user1905410 It does more than that, as the Fine Documentation covers.
    – user166390
    Dec 19, 2012 at 1:57
  • @user1905410 It does more than that, as the Fine Documentation coveres.
    – user166390
    Dec 19, 2012 at 1:57
-2

It is OS-independent. If you hardcode your paths as C:\Whatever they will only work on Windows. If you hardcode them with the Unix standard "/" they will only work on Unix. os.path.join detects the operating system it is running under and joins the paths using the correct symbol.

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    If you hardcode them with the Unix standard "/" they will only work on Unix. That is wrong. "/" works just fine on windows AND linux/unix/bsd/darwin. Jul 2, 2016 at 11:18

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