163

In Python what command should I use to get the name of the folder which contains the file I'm working with?

"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml"

Here "folder2" is what I want to get.

The only thing I've come up with is to use os.path.split twice:

folderName = os.path.split(os.path.split("C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml")[0])[1]

Is there any better way to do it?

1

8 Answers 8

305

You can use dirname:

os.path.dirname(path)

Return the directory name of pathname path. This is the first element of the pair returned by passing path to the function split().

And given the full path, then you can split normally to get the last portion of the path. For example, by using basename:

os.path.basename(path)

Return the base name of pathname path. This is the second element of the pair returned by passing path to the function split(). Note that the result of this function is different from the Unix basename program; where basename for '/foo/bar/' returns 'bar', the basename() function returns an empty string ('').


All together:

>>> import os
>>> path=os.path.dirname("C:/folder1/folder2/filename.xml")
>>> path
'C:/folder1/folder2'
>>> os.path.basename(path)
'folder2'
0
31

You are looking to use dirname. If you only want that one directory, you can use os.path.basename,

When put all together it looks like this:

os.path.basename(os.path.dirname('dir/sub_dir/other_sub_dir/file_name.txt'))

That should get you "other_sub_dir"

The following is not the ideal approach, but I originally proposed,using os.path.split, and simply get the last item. which would look like this:

os.path.split(os.path.dirname('dir/sub_dir/other_sub_dir/file_name.txt'))[-1]
0
23

this is pretty old, but if you are using Python 3.4 or above use PathLib.

# using OS
import os
path=os.path.dirname("C:/folder1/folder2/filename.xml")
print(path)
print(os.path.basename(path))

# using pathlib
import pathlib
path = pathlib.PurePath("C:/folder1/folder2/filename.xml")
print(path.parent)
print(path.parent.name)
1
  • Using pathlib, if you don't know whether your path is a file or directory, and you just want the os.path.dirname, that is, you want the full path if the path is already a directory, but if it's a file you want the full path of the directory that the file is in, then how can you do it?
    – NeilG
    Commented Jun 1 at 5:17
12

os.path.dirname is what you are looking for -

os.path.dirname(r"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml")

Make sure you prepend r to the string so that its considered as a raw string.

Demo -

In [46]: os.path.dirname(r"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml")
Out[46]: 'C:\\folder1\\folder2'

If you just want folder2 , you can use os.path.basename with the above, Example -

os.path.basename(os.path.dirname(r"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml"))

Demo -

In [48]: os.path.basename(os.path.dirname(r"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml"))
Out[48]: 'folder2'
6

you can use pathlib

from pathlib import Path
Path(r"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml").parts[-2]

The output of the above was this:

'folder2'
1
  • 1
    Path(r"C:\folder1\folder2\filename.xml").parent should do the job
    – wontleave
    Commented May 9, 2022 at 16:42
3

You could get the full path as a string then split it into a list using your operating system's separator character. Then you get the program name, folder name etc by accessing the elements from the end of the list using negative indices.

Like this:

import os
strPath = os.path.realpath(__file__)
print( f"Full Path    :{strPath}" )
nmFolders = strPath.split( os.path.sep )
print( "List of Folders:", nmFolders )
print( f"Program Name :{nmFolders[-1]}" )
print( f"Folder Name  :{nmFolders[-2]}" )
print( f"Folder Parent:{nmFolders[-3]}" )

The output of the above was this:

Full Path    :C:\Users\terry\Documents\apps\environments\dev\app_02\app_02.py
List of Folders: ['C:', 'Users', 'terry', 'Documents', 'apps', 'environments', 'dev', 'app_02', 'app_02.py']
Program Name :app_02.py
Folder Name  :app_02
Folder Parent:dev
2

I made an improvement on the solutions available, namely the snippet that works with all of,

  1. File
  2. Directory with a training slash
  3. Directory without a training slash

My solution is,

from pathlib import Path

def path_lastname(s):
    Path(s).with_name("foo").parts[-2]

Explanation

  • Path(s) - Creates a custom Path object out of s without resolving it.

  • .with_name("foo") - Adds a fake file foo to the path

  • .parts[-2] returns second last part of the string. -1 part will be foo

1
  • .parts did the trick for me for pathlib Path.
    – Doc
    Commented Jan 30 at 14:25
0

I'm using 2 ways to get the same response: one of them use:

   os.path.basename(filename)

due to errors that I found in my script I changed to:

Path = filename[:(len(filename)-len(os.path.basename(filename)))]

it's a workaround due to python's '\\'

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