Recent i was learning pathnames manipulation in python, having a basic understanding of modules the following statements confused me
os
and os.path
are both modules :( how is this possible
Then i looked at os.py source code and found the following enlightening line of code
57. import posixpath as path
My question are
Why should i use os.path.join('bin','utils')
instead of posixpath.join('bin','utils')
?
What is the simples possible way to exlain x
and x.y
as both modules and when should i apply this technique?
os.path
name is an alias for this module on Posix systems; on other systems (e.g. Mac, Windows),os.path
provides the same operations in a manner specific to that platform, and is an alias to another module (e.g. macpath, ntpath)"import posixpath as path
you will see that it only happens if the script is running on a Posix system.posixpath
is not intended to be used directly by normal user code, you should letos
handle those details for you. Otherwise, your script won't work on non-Posix systems.posixpath
if knows exactly what he/she is doing otherwseos.path
is the best choice