Changing the Current Working Directory in Python To change the current working directory in Python, use the chdir() method. The method accepts one argument, the path to the directory to which you want to change. The path argument can be absolute or relative.
The Python Command PromptUse "cd" to change your directory to the folder with the current version of Python you want to use (i.e. C:/Python26/ArcGIS10. 0). Type "dir" in this folder and you'll see "python.exe".
chdir() method in Python used to change the current working directory to specified path. It takes only a single argument as new directory path. Parameters: path: A complete path of directory to be changed to new directory path.
This will change your current working directory to so that opening relative paths will work:
import os
os.chdir("/home/udi/foo")
However, you asked how to change into whatever directory your Python script is located, even if you don't know what directory that will be when you're writing your script. To do this, you can use the os.path
functions:
import os
abspath = os.path.abspath(__file__)
dname = os.path.dirname(abspath)
os.chdir(dname)
This takes the filename of your script, converts it to an absolute path, then extracts the directory of that path, then changes into that directory.
You can get a shorter version by using sys.path[0]
.
os.chdir(sys.path[0])
From http://docs.python.org/library/sys.html#sys.path
As initialized upon program startup, the first item of this list,
path[0]
, is the directory containing the script that was used to invoke the Python interpreter
Don't do this.
Your scripts and your data should not be mashed into one big directory. Put your code in some known location (site-packages
or /var/opt/udi
or something) separate from your data. Use good version control on your code to be sure that you have current and previous versions separated from each other so you can fall back to previous versions and test future versions.
Bottom line: Do not mingle code and data.
Data is precious. Code comes and goes.
Provide the working directory as a command-line argument value. You can provide a default as an environment variable. Don't deduce it (or guess at it)
Make it a required argument value and do this.
import sys
import os
working= os.environ.get("WORKING_DIRECTORY","/some/default")
if len(sys.argv) > 1: working = sys.argv[1]
os.chdir( working )
Do not "assume" a directory based on the location of your software. It will not work out well in the long run.
Change your crontab command to
* * * * * (cd /home/udi/foo/ || exit 1; ./bar.py)
The (...)
starts a sub-shell that your crond executes as a single command. The || exit 1
causes your cronjob to fail in case that the directory is unavailable.
Though the other solutions may be more elegant in the long run for your specific scripts, my example could still be useful in cases where you can't modify the program or command that you want to execute.
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