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pathlib's relative_to doesn't accept walk_up parameter

I'm using Python 3.10.12. I'm trying to walk back up a path to find a given folder and walk back down the tree again from that folder. Here's my code:

from pathlib import Path
p = Path(__file__).relative_to('some-parent-path-i-know-exists', walk_up=True)

And here is the error I'm getting:

TypeError: PurePath.relative_to() got an unexpected keyword argument 'walk_up'

According to pathlib's documentation, I should be able to use the walk_up parameter to allow for the pattern to be matched even if the Path doesn't start with that pattern. My IDE even suggests walk_up as an auto-complete option for the call to the relative_to() function. That tells me the parameter does indeed exist.

I tried declaring p as a PurePath, but that didn't help.

What am I doing wrong?

like image 407
Yohann Pitrey Avatar asked Oct 17 '25 20:10

Yohann Pitrey


1 Answers

You linked the Python3.12.1 documentation and as it says for walk_up parameter:

Changed in version 3.12: The walk_up parameter was added (old behavior is the same as walk_up=False).

If you check the same documentation for Python3.10, then you will see the walk_up parameter is not supported in that Python version. (I have checked the implementation of PurePath for Python3.10 and it's really not supported based on the implementation as well)

like image 141
milanbalazs Avatar answered Oct 19 '25 11:10

milanbalazs



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