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I recently started using Cython, and when compiling one of my scripts, the line:

Y = str(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__ )))

seems to have issues when compiling. Now I understand it cannot find the "file" after it has been compiled with Cython, but I am looking for another way to find the file's local path so that it can be used to reference other files. For example, if the file was stored in C:\Users\example\test.py, I need something that can store that directory in a variable I can use later.

The error I receive in the command line:

name '__file__' is not defined

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  • If you're using Cython, you're probably using setuptools. In which case you probably want to use Resource Manager to access your data files. setuptools/pkg_resources will take care of putting them somewhere appropriate after an install or a build_ext --inplace or even something like PyInstaller bundling the whole app up as a single file, and your code doesn't have to care where that "somewhere appropriate" is.
    – abarnert
    Aug 7, 2018 at 18:37
  • Problem is that when loading a module in cython, it won't be in that location anymore - cython modules are converted to C extensions, compiled and then installed to python's library directory. The .py file is not being loaded anymore and can even be deleted at this point.
    – nosklo
    Aug 7, 2018 at 18:38
  • So what would you recommend? Because I need to reference .json files that are stored in the same directory as the .py files
    – J.Viel
    Aug 7, 2018 at 18:51
  • I'd recommend not relying on the .json files being in any particular location at runtime, and access them with resource_string (or, if they're really big, resource_stream) instead.
    – abarnert
    Aug 7, 2018 at 18:57
  • But the user creates these json files, so they have to be stored and opened.
    – J.Viel
    Aug 7, 2018 at 19:00

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