1784

Is there a function to extract the extension from a filename?

0

33 Answers 33

2580

Use os.path.splitext:

>>> import os
>>> filename, file_extension = os.path.splitext('/path/to/somefile.ext')
>>> filename
'/path/to/somefile'
>>> file_extension
'.ext'

Unlike most manual string-splitting attempts, os.path.splitext will correctly treat /a/b.c/d as having no extension instead of having extension .c/d, and it will treat .bashrc as having no extension instead of having extension .bashrc:

>>> os.path.splitext('/a/b.c/d')
('/a/b.c/d', '')
>>> os.path.splitext('.bashrc')
('.bashrc', '')
11
  • 22
    the use of basename is a little confusing here since os.path.basename("/path/to/somefile.ext") would return "somefile.ext"
    – Jiaaro
    Sep 19, 2011 at 21:35
  • 21
    wouldn't endswith() not be more portable and pythonic? Aug 28, 2013 at 16:42
  • 8
    You can't rely on that if you have files with "double extensions", like .mp3.asd for example, because it will return you only the "last" extension!
    – klingt.net
    Jan 9, 2014 at 11:15
  • 86
    @klingt.net Well, in that case, .asd is really the extension!! If you think about it, foo.tar.gz is a gzip-compressed file (.gz) which happens to be a tar file (.tar). But it is a gzip file in first place. I wouldn't expect it to return the dual extension at all.
    – nosklo
    Jan 16, 2014 at 20:18
  • 234
    The standard Python function naming convention is really annoying - almost every time I re-look this up, I mistake it as being splittext. If they would just do anything to signify the break between parts of this name, it'd be much easier to recognize that it's splitExt or split_ext. Surely I can't be the only person who has made this mistake? Jan 7, 2015 at 23:27
641

New in version 3.4.

import pathlib

print(pathlib.Path('yourPath.example').suffix) # '.example'
print(pathlib.Path("hello/foo.bar.tar.gz").suffixes) # ['.bar', '.tar', '.gz']
print(pathlib.Path('/foo/bar.txt').stem) # 'bar'

I'm surprised no one has mentioned pathlib yet, pathlib IS awesome!

5
  • 31
    example for getting .tar.gz: ''.join(pathlib.Path('somedir/file.tar.gz').suffixes)
    – teichert
    Aug 3, 2017 at 18:15
  • Great answer. I found this tutorial more useful than the documentation: zetcode.com/python/pathlib
    – user118967
    Sep 11, 2019 at 2:38
  • 3
    @user3780389 Wouldn't a "foo.bar.tar.gz" still be a valid ".tar.gz"? If so your snippet should be using .suffixes[-2:] to ensure only getting .tar.gz at most.
    – jeromej
    Apr 20, 2020 at 7:25
  • there are still cases when this does not work as expected like "filename with.a dot inside.tar". This is the solution i am using currently: "".join([s for s in pathlib.Path('somedir/file.tar.gz').suffixes if not " " in s])
    – eadmaster
    Jan 2, 2021 at 19:09
  • this one should be acceptable answer Sep 22 at 10:53
490
import os.path
extension = os.path.splitext(filename)[1]
10
  • 26
    Out of curiosity, why import os.path instead of from os import path?
    – kiswa
    Aug 26, 2011 at 12:40
  • 1
    @kiswa - I suppose you could do it that way. I've seen more code using import os.path though.
    – Brian Neal
    Aug 26, 2011 at 19:01
  • 78
    it depends really, if you use from os import path then the name path is taken up in your local scope, also others looking at the code may not immediately know that path is the path from the os module. Where as if you use import os.path it keeps it within the os namespace and wherever you make the call people know it's path() from the os module immediately.
    – dennmat
    Nov 24, 2011 at 18:45
  • 29
    I know it's not semantically any different, but I personally find the construction _, extension = os.path.splitext(filename) to be much nicer-looking. Aug 14, 2014 at 3:37
  • 3
    If you want the extension as part of a more complex expression the [1] may be more useful: if check_for_gzip and os.path.splitext(filename)[1] == '.gz':
    – gerardw
    Feb 20, 2018 at 19:38
143
import os.path
extension = os.path.splitext(filename)[1][1:]

To get only the text of the extension, without the dot.

1
  • 1
    This will return empty for both file names end with . and file names without an extension.
    – user202729
    Dec 12, 2020 at 16:11
112

For simple use cases one option may be splitting from dot:

>>> filename = "example.jpeg"
>>> filename.split(".")[-1]
'jpeg'

No error when file doesn't have an extension:

>>> "filename".split(".")[-1]
'filename'

But you must be careful:

>>> "png".split(".")[-1]
'png'    # But file doesn't have an extension

Also will not work with hidden files in Unix systems:

>>> ".bashrc".split(".")[-1]
'bashrc'    # But this is not an extension

For general use, prefer os.path.splitext

13
  • 5
    This would get upset if you're uploading x.tar.gz
    – Kirill
    May 11, 2012 at 13:59
  • 22
    Not actually. Extension of a file named "x.tar.gz" is "gz" not "tar.gz". os.path.splitext gives ".os" as extension too. May 11, 2012 at 20:21
  • 2
    can we use [1] rather than [-1]. I could not understand [-1] with split
    – user765443
    Aug 21, 2013 at 5:44
  • 11
    [-1] to get last item of items that splitted by dot. Example: "my.file.name.js".split('.') => ['my','file','name','js] Aug 21, 2013 at 8:27
  • 2
    @BenjaminR ah ok, you are making an optimisation about result list. ['file', 'tar', 'gz'] with 'file.tar.gz'.split('.') vs ['file.tar', 'gz'] with 'file.tar.gz'.rsplit('.', 1). yeah, could be. Aug 28, 2017 at 8:44
42

worth adding a lower in there so you don't find yourself wondering why the JPG's aren't showing up in your list.

os.path.splitext(filename)[1][1:].strip().lower()
2
  • The strip() will break in rare edge-cases where the filename extension includes whitespace.
    – Flimm
    Apr 29 at 9:22
  • Some filesystems are case-sensitive (like the ones on Linux), and even NTFS is case-sensitive, although Windows tries to treat it in a case-insensitive manner. Be careful with case.
    – Flimm
    Apr 29 at 9:23
22

Any of the solutions above work, but on linux I have found that there is a newline at the end of the extension string which will prevent matches from succeeding. Add the strip() method to the end. For example:

import os.path
extension = os.path.splitext(filename)[1][1:].strip() 
3
  • 1
    To aid my understanding, please could you explain what additional behaviour the second index/slice guards against? (i.e. the [1:] in .splittext(filename)[1][1:]) - thank you in advance Oct 11, 2011 at 9:47
  • 1
    Figured it out for myself: splittext() (unlike if you split a string using '.') includes the '.' character in the extension. The additional [1:] gets rid of it. Oct 11, 2011 at 9:55
  • This will break if the file extension contains whitespace. That's a rare case, I know, but it's still an edge-case that should be considered.
    – Flimm
    Apr 29 at 9:22
22

With splitext there are problems with files with double extension (e.g. file.tar.gz, file.tar.bz2, etc..)

>>> fileName, fileExtension = os.path.splitext('/path/to/somefile.tar.gz')
>>> fileExtension 
'.gz'

but should be: .tar.gz

The possible solutions are here

5
  • 1
    do it twice to get the 2 extensions ?
    – maazza
    Jun 12, 2013 at 11:55
  • 1
    @maazza yep. gunzip somefile.tar.gz what's the output filename?
    – FlipMcF
    Jun 14, 2013 at 0:33
  • 1
    This is why we have the extension 'tgz' which means: tar+gzip ! :D Sep 21, 2014 at 23:07
  • @FlipMcF The filename should obviously be somefile.tar. For tar -xzvf somefile.tar.gz the filename should be somefile.
    – peterhil
    Oct 12, 2014 at 18:51
  • 1
    @peterhil I don't think you want your python script to be aware of the application used to create the filename. It's a bit out of scope of the question. Don't pick on the example, 'filename.csv.gz' is also quite valid.
    – FlipMcF
    Oct 15, 2014 at 21:10
22

You can find some great stuff in pathlib module (available in python 3.x).

import pathlib
x = pathlib.PurePosixPath("C:\\Path\\To\\File\\myfile.txt").suffix
print(x)

# Output 
'.txt'
1
  • 1
    Using PosixPath for a windows path is wrong.
    – Lior Elbaz
    Mar 7, 2021 at 9:15
19

Just join all pathlib suffixes.

>>> x = 'file/path/archive.tar.gz'
>>> y = 'file/path/text.txt'
>>> ''.join(pathlib.Path(x).suffixes)
'.tar.gz'
>>> ''.join(pathlib.Path(y).suffixes)
'.txt'
17

Although it is an old topic, but i wonder why there is none mentioning a very simple api of python called rpartition in this case:

to get extension of a given file absolute path, you can simply type:

filepath.rpartition('.')[-1]

example:

path = '/home/jersey/remote/data/test.csv'
print path.rpartition('.')[-1]

will give you: 'csv'

1
  • 2
    For those not familiar with the API, rpartition returns a tuple: ("string before the right-most occurrence of the separator", "the separator itself", "the rest of the string"). If there's no separator found, the returned tuple will be: ("", "", "the original string").
    – Nickolay
    May 26, 2018 at 22:03
12

Surprised this wasn't mentioned yet:

import os
fn = '/some/path/a.tar.gz'

basename = os.path.basename(fn)  # os independent
Out[] a.tar.gz

base = basename.split('.')[0]
Out[] a

ext = '.'.join(basename.split('.')[1:])   # <-- main part

# if you want a leading '.', and if no result `None`:
ext = '.' + ext if ext else None
Out[] .tar.gz

Benefits:

  • Works as expected for anything I can think of
  • No modules
  • No regex
  • Cross-platform
  • Easily extendible (e.g. no leading dots for extension, only last part of extension)

As function:

def get_extension(filename):
    basename = os.path.basename(filename)  # os independent
    ext = '.'.join(basename.split('.')[1:])
    return '.' + ext if ext else None
4
  • 2
    This results in an exception when the file doesn't have any extension. Apr 1, 2016 at 13:42
  • 7
    This answer absolutely ignore a variant if a filename contains many points in name. Example get_extension('cmocka-1.1.0.tar.xz') => '.1.0.tar.xz' - wrong.
    – PADYMKO
    Dec 29, 2016 at 8:46
  • @PADYMKO, IMHO one should not create filenames with full stops as part of the filename. The code above is not supposed to result in 'tar.xz' Dec 13, 2019 at 9:01
  • 2
    Just change to [-1] then. Dec 13, 2019 at 14:36
12

You can use a split on a filename:

f_extns = filename.split(".")
print ("The extension of the file is : " + repr(f_extns[-1]))

This does not require additional library

11
filename='ext.tar.gz'
extension = filename[filename.rfind('.'):]
1
  • 2
    This results in the last char of filename being returned if the filename has no . at all. This is because rfind returns -1 if the string is not found.
    – mattst
    Jul 25, 2016 at 11:33
10

Extracting extension from filename in Python

Python os module splitext()

splitext() function splits the file path into a tuple having two values – root and extension.

import os
# unpacking the tuple
file_name, file_extension = os.path.splitext("/Users/Username/abc.txt")
print(file_name)
print(file_extension)

Get File Extension using Pathlib Module

Pathlib module to get the file extension

import pathlib
pathlib.Path("/Users/pankaj/abc.txt").suffix
#output:'.txt'
6

Even this question is already answered I'd add the solution in Regex.

>>> import re
>>> file_suffix = ".*(\..*)"
>>> result = re.search(file_suffix, "somefile.ext")
>>> result.group(1)
'.ext'
1
6

This is a direct string representation techniques : I see a lot of solutions mentioned, but I think most are looking at split. Split however does it at every occurrence of "." . What you would rather be looking for is partition.

string = "folder/to_path/filename.ext"
extension = string.rpartition(".")[-1]
1
  • 4
    rpartition was already suggested by @weiyixie.
    – Nickolay
    May 26, 2018 at 22:04
5

Another solution with right split:

# to get extension only

s = 'test.ext'

if '.' in s: ext = s.rsplit('.', 1)[1]

# or, to get file name and extension

def split_filepath(s):
    """
    get filename and extension from filepath 
    filepath -> (filename, extension)
    """
    if not '.' in s: return (s, '')
    r = s.rsplit('.', 1)
    return (r[0], r[1])
5

you can use following code to split file name and extension.

    import os.path
    filenamewithext = os.path.basename(filepath)
    filename, ext = os.path.splitext(filenamewithext)
    #print file name
    print(filename)
    #print file extension
    print(ext)
2

A true one-liner, if you like regex. And it doesn't matter even if you have additional "." in the middle

import re

file_ext = re.search(r"\.([^.]+)$", filename).group(1)

See here for the result: Click Here

2

You can use endswith to identify the file extension in python

like bellow example

for file in os.listdir():
    if file.endswith('.csv'):
        df1 =pd.read_csv(file)
        frames.append(df1)
        result = pd.concat(frames)
2

Well , i know im late

that's my simple solution

file = '/foo/bar/whatever.ext'
extension = file.split('.')[-1]
print(extension)

#output will be ext
2
  • @NsaNinja but the malware.pdf.exe is [exe] type ! also for tar.gz ! Nov 5, 2022 at 12:46
  • 1
    I agree that there are drawbacks for completeness, HOWEVER, this is a "simple" solution and for simple uses it works. In my case, for example, I've already confirmed that the file exists and is one of several filtered file types. I just need to know which one. For that application, this works.
    – BSD
    Nov 15, 2022 at 17:40
1

try this:

files = ['file.jpeg','file.tar.gz','file.png','file.foo.bar','file.etc']
pen_ext = ['foo', 'tar', 'bar', 'etc']

for file in files: #1
    if (file.split(".")[-2] in pen_ext): #2
        ext =  file.split(".")[-2]+"."+file.split(".")[-1]#3
    else:
        ext = file.split(".")[-1] #4
    print (ext) #5
  1. get all file name inside the list
  2. splitting file name and check the penultimate extension, is it in the pen_ext list or not?
  3. if yes then join it with the last extension and set it as the file's extension
  4. if not then just put the last extension as the file's extension
  5. and then check it out
5
  • 2
    This breaks for a bunch of special cases. See the accepted answer. It's reinventing the wheel, only in a buggy way.
    – Robert
    Apr 20, 2020 at 23:59
  • Hello! While this code may solve the question, including an explanation of how and why this solves the problem would really help to improve the quality of your post, and probably result in more up-votes. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, not just the person asking now. Please edit your answer to add explanations and give an indication of what limitations and assumptions apply. Apr 21, 2020 at 0:34
  • @Brian like that? Apr 21, 2020 at 0:49
  • You're only making it worse, breaking it in new ways. foo.tar is a valid file name. What happens if I throw that at your code? What about .bashrc or foo? There is a library function for this for a reason...
    – Robert
    Apr 21, 2020 at 1:25
  • just create a list of extension file for the penultimate extension, if not in list then just put the last extension as the file's extension Apr 21, 2020 at 6:45
1

The easiest way to get is to use mimtypes, below is the example:

import mimetypes

mt = mimetypes.guess_type("file name")
file_extension =  mt[0]
print(file_extension)
1

I'm definitely late to the party, but in case anyone wanted to achieve this without the use of another library:

file_path = "example_tar.tar.gz"
file_name, file_ext = [file_path if "." not in file_path else file_path.split(".")[0], "" if "." not in file_path else file_path[file_path.find(".") + 1:]]
print(file_name, file_ext)

The 2nd line is basically just the following code but crammed into one line:

def name_and_ext(file_path):
    if "." not in file_path:
        file_name = file_path
    else:
        file_name = file_path.split(".")[0]
    if "." not in file_path:
        file_ext = ""
    else:
        file_ext = file_path[file_path.find(".") + 1:]
    return [file_name, file_ext]

Even though this works, it might not work will all types of files, specifically .zshrc, I would recomment using os's os.path.splitext function, example below:

import os
file_path = "example.tar.gz"
file_name, file_ext = os.path.splitext(file_path)
print(file_name, file_ext)

Cheers :)

0

For funsies... just collect the extensions in a dict, and track all of them in a folder. Then just pull the extensions you want.

import os

search = {}

for f in os.listdir(os.getcwd()):
    fn, fe = os.path.splitext(f)
    try:
        search[fe].append(f)
    except:
        search[fe]=[f,]

extensions = ('.png','.jpg')
for ex in extensions:
    found = search.get(ex,'')
    if found:
        print(found)
1
  • That's a terrible idea. Your code breaks for any file extension you haven't previously added!
    – Robert
    Apr 21, 2020 at 0:02
0

This method will require a dictonary, list, or set. you can just use ".endswith" using built in string methods. This will search for name in list at end of file and can be done with just str.endswith(fileName[index]). This is more for getting and comparing extensions.

https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#string-methods

Example 1:

dictonary = {0:".tar.gz", 1:".txt", 2:".exe", 3:".js", 4:".java", 5:".python", 6:".ruby",7:".c", 8:".bash", 9:".ps1", 10:".html", 11:".html5", 12:".css", 13:".json", 14:".abc"} 
for x in dictonary.values():
    str = "file" + x
    str.endswith(x, str.index("."), len(str))

Example 2:

set1 = {".tar.gz", ".txt", ".exe", ".js", ".java", ".python", ".ruby", ".c", ".bash", ".ps1", ".html", ".html5", ".css", ".json", ".abc"}
for x in set1:
   str = "file" + x
   str.endswith(x, str.index("."), len(str))

Example 3:

fileName = [".tar.gz", ".txt", ".exe", ".js", ".java", ".python", ".ruby", ".c", ".bash", ".ps1", ".html", ".html5", ".css", ".json", ".abc"];
for x in range(0, len(fileName)):
    str = "file" + fileName[x]
    str.endswith(fileName[x], str.index("."), len(str))

Example 4

fileName = [".tar.gz", ".txt", ".exe", ".js", ".java", ".python", ".ruby", ".c", ".bash", ".ps1", ".html", ".html5", ".css", ".json", ".abc"];
str = "file.txt"
str.endswith(fileName[1], str.index("."), len(str))

Examples 5, 6, 7 with output enter image description here

Example 8

fileName = [".tar.gz", ".txt", ".exe", ".js", ".java", ".python", ".ruby", ".c", ".bash", ".ps1", ".html", ".html5", ".css", ".json", ".abc"];
exts = []
str = "file.txt"
for x in range(0, len(x)):
    if str.endswith(fileName[1]) == 1:
         exts += [x]
     
0

Here if you want to extract the last file extension if it has multiple

class functions:
    def listdir(self, filepath):
        return os.listdir(filepath)
    
func = functions()

os.chdir("C:\\Users\Asus-pc\Downloads") #absolute path, change this to your directory
current_dir = os.getcwd()

for i in range(len(func.listdir(current_dir))): #i is set to numbers of files and directories on path directory
    if os.path.isfile((func.listdir(current_dir))[i]): #check if it is a file
        fileName = func.listdir(current_dir)[i] #put the current filename into a variable
        rev_fileName = fileName[::-1] #reverse the filename
        currentFileExtension = rev_fileName[:rev_fileName.index('.')][::-1] #extract from beginning until before .
        print(currentFileExtension) #output can be mp3,pdf,ini,exe, depends on the file on your absolute directory

Output is mp3, even works if has only 1 extension name

-2
# try this, it works for anything, any length of extension
# e.g www.google.com/downloads/file1.gz.rs -> .gz.rs

import os.path

class LinkChecker:

    @staticmethod
    def get_link_extension(link: str)->str:
        if link is None or link == "":
            return ""
        else:
            paths = os.path.splitext(link)
            ext = paths[1]
            new_link = paths[0]
            if ext != "":
                return LinkChecker.get_link_extension(new_link) + ext
            else:
                return ""
-2
a = ".bashrc"
b = "text.txt"
extension_a = a.split(".")
extension_b = b.split(".")
print(extension_a[-1])  # bashrc
print(extension_b[-1])  # txt
1
  • Please add explanation of the code, rather than simply just the code snippets. Sep 8, 2021 at 23:55

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