The question was already answered above, this is just a tangential observation that may be useful to somebody.
I hit this question when trying to figure out a way to remove a temporary file after the dictionary it was being referred to goes deleted.
The context is a Flask session: the user can upload some files but give up before effectively commit the whole workflow it has to go through to get his/her data into the final destination. Until then, I keep the files in a temporary directory. Let's say the user give up and closes the browser window, I don't want those files lingering around.
Since I keep the temporary path in a Flask session -- which is just a dictionary that eventually goes deleted (e.g, timeout), I can customize a str
class to hold the temporary directory address/path, and have its __del__
method handling the temporary directory deletion.
Here it goes:
class Tempdir(str):
def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
from tempfile import mkdtemp
_dir = mkdtemp()
return super().__new__(cls, _dir)
def __del__(self):
from shutil import rmtree
rmtree(str(self))
Instantiate it in your python interpreter/app:
> d = Tempfile()
> d
'/var/folders/b1/frq3gywj3ljfqrf1yc7zk06r0000gn/T/tmptwa_g5fw'
>
> import os
> os.path.exists(d)
True
When you exit the interpreter:
$ ls /var/folders/b1/frq3gywj3ljfqrf1yc7zk06r0000gn/T/tmptwa_g5fw
ls: /var/folders/b1/frq3gywj3ljfqrf1yc7zk06r0000gn/T/tmptwa_g5fw: No such file or directory
There you go.