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How/where to use os.path.sep?

Tags:

python

os.path

os.path.sep is the character used by the operating system to separate pathname components.

But when os.path.sep is used in os.path.join(), why does it truncate the path?

Example:

Instead of 'home/python', os.path.join returns '/python':

>>> import os
>>> os.path.join('home', os.path.sep, 'python')
'/python'

I know that os.path.join() inserts the directory separator implicitly.

Where is os.path.sep useful? Why does it truncate the path?

like image 800
Gaurav Vichare Avatar asked Sep 07 '15 04:09

Gaurav Vichare


1 Answers

Where os.path.sep is usefull?

I suspect that it exists mainly because a variable like this is required in the module anyway (to avoid hardcoding), and if it's there, it might as well be documented. Its documentation says that it is "occasionally useful".

Why it truncates the path?

From the docs for os.path.join():

If a component is an absolute path, all previous components are thrown away and joining continues from the absolute path component.

and / is an absolute path on *nix systems.

like image 51
fjarri Avatar answered Nov 03 '22 05:11

fjarri