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I'm trying to remove a directory and I guess i'm having an issue with defining the path for the shutil.rmtree(). Does this function take the relative path or the absolute. I use win10 and am having problem understanding how the paths can and should be defined in python, because it seems that for every function the path needs to be defined in a different way.

import shutil
dir_to_remove = "C:\\Users\name_of_user\\dir_to remove"
shutil.rmtree(dir_to_remove)

Result is:

Traceback (most recent call last):

  File "<ipython-input-257-9cc5f9fe51d2>", line 1, in <module>
    shutil.rmtree(dir_to_remove)

TypeError: 'str' object is not callable

Any help or guidance is appreciated.

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  • I am able to remove my dir using below code dir_to_remove = "C:\\Users\\abc\\Downloads\\test" shutil.rmtree(dir_to_remove) Are you missing "\" could be like this dir_to_remove = "C:\\Users\\name_of_user\\dir_to remove"
    – SUN
    Feb 19, 2020 at 14:51
  • 1
    The error message looks like you somehow managed to overwrite the rmtree function. As such, this seems unreproducible. What is the output of print(type(shutil.rmtree)) and prit(shutil.rmtree)?
    – tripleee
    Feb 19, 2020 at 15:10
  • If you can reproduce this with the same traceback without the backslash error, please edit so we can reopen. We'd like to see a minimal reproducible example.
    – tripleee
    Feb 19, 2020 at 15:22
  • the function has been overwritten. I didn't know this is possible in Python, to overwrite a function from a package. This solved my issue.
    – adl
    Feb 19, 2020 at 15:50

1 Answer 1

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You are missing the second backslash after C:\\Users.

dir_to_remove = "C:\\Users\\name_of_user\\dir_to remove"
shutil.rmtree(dir_to_remove)
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  • @tripleee, I am assuming it will have an import statement, I just provided the pseudo-code. There are missing "\" in the original statement..
    – SUN
    Feb 19, 2020 at 15:11
  • Good catch, but that would not explain the mystery traceback.
    – tripleee
    Feb 19, 2020 at 15:21

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