181

I would like to get file path as input in my Python console application.

Currently I can only ask for full path as an input in the console.

Is there a way to trigger a simple user interface where users can select file instead of typing the full path?

1
  • 3
    Good question. I was just looking for this. I upvoted it. Thanks!
    – Priya
    May 28, 2021 at 10:14

11 Answers 11

277

How about using tkinter?

from Tkinter import Tk     # from tkinter import Tk for Python 3.x
from tkinter.filedialog import askopenfilename

Tk().withdraw() # we don't want a full GUI, so keep the root window from appearing
filename = askopenfilename() # show an "Open" dialog box and return the path to the selected file
print(filename)

Done!

8
  • I got TypeError: 'module' object is not callable on Tk().withdraw() - any ideas?
    – user391339
    Feb 18, 2014 at 20:58
  • 2
    I had to do root = Tk.Tk() then root.withdraw(). Now the open file dialog window does not close however.
    – user391339
    Feb 18, 2014 at 21:07
  • 40
    Using Python 3.x and I believe "Tkinter" is actually supposed to be all lowercase, "tkinter".
    – WestAce
    Jun 29, 2018 at 18:11
  • 2
    @WestAce yes, it was changed from "Tkinter" to "tkinter" for Python3
    – Ben
    Jul 19, 2018 at 0:26
  • 7
    Is there any way to allow only certain types of files? for eg. I want the user to select image files only Nov 8, 2019 at 7:09
106

Python 3.x version of Etaoin's answer for completeness:

from tkinter.filedialog import askopenfilename
filename = askopenfilename()
7
  • 12
    For total parallelism, should probably also have import tkinter + tkinter.Tk().withdraw().
    – imallett
    Apr 4, 2017 at 3:43
  • 5
    this does not work for me (on Mac, Python 3.6.6) The GUI window opens but you cannot close it and you get beachball of death Aug 20, 2018 at 11:25
  • 4
    same here. the file dialog won't close
    – Cabara
    Oct 25, 2018 at 2:20
  • 2
    this code is the exact same as the accepted answer but incomplete.
    – eric
    Aug 8, 2019 at 4:44
  • On Mac 10.14.6, this opened the File finder then it just crashed the entire system :(
    – gaya
    Sep 6, 2019 at 19:30
45

With EasyGui:

import easygui
print(easygui.fileopenbox())

To install:

pip install easygui

Demo:

import easygui
easygui.egdemo()
7
  • 4
    This is the best solution so far. The main reason is that easygui is a pip package and easy to install Jun 7, 2017 at 8:13
  • 4
    On Mac OSX 10.14.5, python 3.6.7, easygui 0.98.1 I get a horrible crash when I try this. Not recommended. Aug 20, 2019 at 21:12
  • Why am I getting invalid syntax error for print easygui.diropenbox()?
    – Bricktop
    Sep 4, 2019 at 11:13
  • 2
    @Bricktop stackoverflow.com/questions/826948/… ?
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2019 at 15:11
  • 1
    @ChristopherBarber same with 10.14.6. Python just keeps quitting.
    – gaya
    Sep 6, 2019 at 19:17
13

In Python 2 use the tkFileDialog module.

import tkFileDialog

tkFileDialog.askopenfilename()

In Python 3 use the tkinter.filedialog module.

import tkinter.filedialog

tkinter.filedialog.askopenfilename()
1
  • 1
    It is not part of standard installation in Python 3. Sep 25, 2019 at 21:59
8

This worked for me

Reference : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H71ts4XxWYU

import  tkinter as tk
from tkinter import filedialog
root = tk.Tk()
root.withdraw()
file_path = filedialog.askopenfilename()
print(file_path)
2
  • How would I then take this file path and put it into a pandas data frame (if the file was, say, from excel) pd.read_excel(r'file_path') does not work @SainathReddy
    – HelpMeCode
    Jun 2, 2022 at 19:25
  • If you print out file_path you will see that it contains forward slashes instead of backwards slashes. Therefore, pandas can handle it across platforms (e.g. Windows and Linux). pd.read_excel(file_path) is all you need. Aug 22, 2022 at 19:53
5

Another option to consider is Zenity: http://freecode.com/projects/zenity.

I had a situation where I was developing a Python server application (no GUI component) and hence didn't want to introduce a dependency on any python GUI toolkits, but I wanted some of my debug scripts to be parameterized by input files and wanted to visually prompt the user for a file if they didn't specify one on the command line. Zenity was a perfect fit. To achieve this, invoke "zenity --file-selection" using the subprocess module and capture the stdout. Of course this solution isn't Python-specific.

Zenity supports multiple platforms and happened to already be installed on our dev servers so it facilitated our debugging/development without introducing an unwanted dependency.

4

I obtained much better results with wxPython than tkinter, as suggested in this answer to a later duplicate question:

https://stackoverflow.com/a/9319832

The wxPython version produced the file dialog that looked the same as the open file dialog from just about any other application on my OpenSUSE Tumbleweed installation with the xfce desktop, whereas tkinter produced something cramped and hard to read with an unfamiliar side-scrolling interface.

4

The suggested root.withdraw() (also here) hides the window instead of deleting it, and was causing problems when using interactive console in VS Code ("duplicate execution" error).

Below two snippets to return the file path in "Open" or "Save As" (python 3 on Windows):

import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import filedialog

filetypes = (
    ('Text files', '*.TXT'),
    ('All files', '*.*'),
)

# open-file dialog
root = tk.Tk()
filename = tk.filedialog.askopenfilename(
    title='Select a file...',
    filetypes=filetypes,
)
root.destroy()
print(filename)

# save-as dialog
root = tk.Tk()
filename = tk.filedialog.asksaveasfilename(
    title='Save as...',
    filetypes=filetypes,
    defaultextension='.txt'
)
root.destroy()
print(filename)
# filename == 'path/to/myfilename.txt' if you type 'myfilename'
# filename == 'path/to/myfilename.abc' if you type 'myfilename.abc'
3

Using Plyer you can get a native file picker on Windows, macOS, Linux, and even Android.

import plyer

plyer.filechooser.open_file()

There are two other methods, choose_dir and save_file. See details in the docs here.

1
2

Here is a simple function to show a file chooser right in the terminal window. This method supports selecting multiple files or directories. This has the added benefit of running even in an environment where GUI is not supported.

from os.path import join,isdir
from pathlib import Path
from enquiries import choose,confirm

def dir_chooser(c_dir=getcwd(),selected_dirs=None,multiple=True) :
    '''
        This function shows a file chooser to select single or
        multiple directories.
    '''
    selected_dirs = selected_dirs if selected_dirs else set([])

    dirs = { item for item in listdir(c_dir) if isdir(join(c_dir, item)) }
    dirs = { item for item in dirs if join(c_dir,item) not in selected_dirs and item[0] != "." } # Remove item[0] != "." if you want to show hidde

    options = [ "Select This directory" ]
    options.extend(dirs)
    options.append("⬅")

    info = f"You have selected : \n {','.join(selected_dirs)} \n" if len(selected_dirs) > 0 else "\n"
    choise = choose(f"{info}You are in {c_dir}", options)

    if choise == options[0] :
        selected_dirs.add(c_dir)

        if multiple and confirm("Do you want to select more folders?") :
            return get_folders(Path(c_dir).parent,selected_dirs,multiple)

        return selected_dirs

    if choise == options[-1] :
        return get_folders(Path(c_dir).parent,selected_dirs,multiple)

    return get_folders(join(c_dir,choise),selected_dirs,multiple)

To install enquiers do,

pip install enquiries

0

I resolved all problem related to from tkinter import * from tkinter import filedialog

by just migrating from pycharm IDE to visual studio code IDE and every problem is solved.

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