I would quite like a set of filename components that will give me consistent and "nice-looking" filenames on both Windows and Cygwin. Here's what I've tried:
Input Windows Cygwin
1 os.path.join('c:', 'foo', 'bar') c:foo\bar c:/foo/bar
2 os.path.join('c:\\', 'foo', 'bar') c:\foo\bar c:\/foo/bar
3 os.path.join('c:/', 'foo', 'bar') c:/foo\bar c:/foo/bar
1 isn't what I want on Windows, I do want an absolute path, not relative to the current directory.
2 and 3 both work, but are not (I hereby define) "nice-looking" since they mix up forward and backward slashes on one platform or the other. My error and logging messages will be more readable if I can avoid this.
Option 4 is to define myself a driveroot
variable equal to c:\
on Windows and /cygdrive/c
on Cygwin. Or a function taking a drive letter and returning same. But I'd also prefer to avoid per-platform special cases between these two.
Can I have everything I want (join identical path components, to give a result that refers to the same absolute path on both platforms, and doesn't mix path separators on either platform)? Or do I have to compromise somewhere?
[Edit: in case it helps, the main use case is that c:\foo
is a path that I know about at configuration time, whereas bar
(and further components) are computed later. So my actual code currently looks a bit more like this:
dir = os.path.join('c:\\', 'foo')
# some time later
os.path.join(dir, 'bar')
That's using option 2, which results in "nice" reporting of filenames in Windows, but "not nice" reporting of filenames in Cygwin. What I want to avoid, if it's possible, is:
if this_is_cygwin():
dir = '/cygdrive/c/foo'
else:
dir = 'c:\\foo'
]
join
along withos.sep
...os.sep.join(path_list)