2

I'm a noob to this site, found lots of answers to other coding challenges in the past.

I'm also a noob to programming in Python. I have some code I wrote in DOS few years ago. Let me explain why:-

when you are using Windows 10 it keeps a log of "files used recently" this can be a big problem when I did a Windows 10 rollout at a big charity, and our HR team needed to borrow a laptop for a meeting, and when I got it back, logging on with the generic log on which was shared, a file was deleted but in frequently used files was something along the lines of "internal investigation into Mr _____.docx" which sounded very confidential.

Anyways, this script I wrote, doesn't disable Windows 10 recently used files, it makes a copy of these files and throws them in a 7zip file. When its finished, it deletes the frequently used list of files, and re-opens with 7zip and puts the files back where they were, so no one knows something sensitive has been used in the meantime.

I did this using part of this script in DOS calling 7zip from command line.

rem *** get rid of the current shortcut list of recently used files ***

del /F /Q %APPDATA%\Microsoft\Windows\Recent\AutomaticDestinations\*

rem *** put back the previously copied set of shortcuts ***

x:\apps\7-zip\7z.exe x x:\internals\scripts\win10recent.7z -o%APPDATA%\Microsoft\Windows\Recent -y

I'm now trying to rewrite this in Python. I'm entirely new to Python, (I'm not an actual programmer by trade) but learned a lot from Googling around to make some portions of the code work so far functional.

Just opening 7zip from within Python I have to do this:-

subprocess.call(['x:\\apps\\7-zip\\7z.exe'])

Here's the bit I am stuck. To call certain generic paths with the % symbols around it, example for %appdata%. I've searched around but I am not sure how I can call this path within Python?

any ideas?

8
  • Those things are called environment variables. (Also, that's not DOS.)
    – melpomene
    Jul 8, 2018 at 21:39
  • 1
    @melpomene probably os.path.expandvars() is a better fit than just accessing environment variables. And I am sure there is some subtlety but how is this not a DOS (.bat) script? (I know recents is a windows things but the script itself?).
    – AChampion
    Jul 8, 2018 at 21:49
  • Not really related to the asked coding problem, but it might be easier to use new system user accounts or guest accounts in these scenarios...
    – Capricorn
    Jul 8, 2018 at 21:53
  • I couldn't find a perfect dup, but I added two that show how to use expandvars to solve similar problems. If someone knows of a better one that could replace all three of these, that would be great. Or, to the OP: Do those dups together tell you everything you need to solve this, or is it still unclear?
    – abarnert
    Jul 8, 2018 at 21:54
  • I added another one that is also close but based on UNIX env variables.
    – AChampion
    Jul 8, 2018 at 21:55

0