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I'm a web application development noob. I have a function that opens a file and reads it. Unfortunately, the directory structures between the test and production servers differ. I was told to "use a path relative to ~". I haven't been able to find any resources on the '~', though!

How do I use the tilde character in the context of paths?

EDIT: This is in Python. I fixed the problem, using os.path.expanduser('~/path/in/home/area').

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    Please specify what kind of web development platform you're on. Is it ASP.NET? Rails? Python? – Håvard S Aug 15 '10 at 18:31
  • I can think of two perfectly correct but completely different answers to this, depending on what you are doing your web application development with. Indeed, the completely different answers so far given cover those, but nobody can be sure which is right, or if it isn't a third one. Please edit your question to include the technology used. – Jon Hanna Aug 15 '10 at 18:35
  • You fixed the problem ~ it would have been nice if you had posted some sample code – Mawg says reinstate Monica Jan 23 '15 at 9:12
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it is your $HOME var in UNIX, which usually is /home/username.

"Your home" meaning the home of the user who's executing a command like cd ~/MyDocuments/ is cd /home/user_executing_cd_commnd/MyDocuments

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    ~ points to your $HOME, which can be any directory (i.e., not necessarily /home/username). – Håvard S Aug 15 '10 at 18:29
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Unless you're writing a shell script or using some other language that knows to substitute the value of $HOME for ~, tildes in file paths have no special meaning and will be treated as any other non-special character.

If you are writing a shell script, shells don't interpret tildes unless they occur as the first character in an argument. In other words, ~/file will become /path/to/users/home/directory/file, but ./~/file will be interpreted literally (i.e., "a file called file in a subdirectory of . called ~").

Used in URLs, interpretation of the tilde as a shorthand for a user's home directory (e.g., http://www.foo.org/~bob) is a convention borrowed from Unix. Implementation is entirely server-specific, so you'd need to check the documentation for your web server to see if it has any special meaning.

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If you are using pathlib for filenames then you can use on both Windows and Linux (I came here for a windows answer):

python from pathlib import Path p = Path('~').expanduser() print(p)

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