path
(aka path pie, formerly path.py
) implements path
objects as first-class entities, allowing common operations on
files to be invoked on those path objects directly. For example:
from path import Path
d = Path("/home/guido/bin")
for f in d.files("*.py"):
f.chmod(0o755)
# Globbing
for f in d.files("*.py"):
f.chmod("u+rwx")
# Changing the working directory:
with Path("somewhere"):
# cwd in now `somewhere`
...
# Concatenate paths with /
foo_txt = Path("bar") / "foo.txt"
Path pie is hosted at Github.
Find the documentation here.
Yasoob wrote the Python 101 Writing a Cleanup Script
based on path
.
Path pie provides a superior experience to similar offerings.
Python 3.4 introduced
pathlib,
which shares many characteristics with path
. In particular,
it provides an object encapsulation for representing filesystem paths.
One may have imagined pathlib
would supersede path
.
But the implementation and the usage quickly diverge, and path
has several advantages over pathlib
:
path
implementsPath
objects as a subclass ofstr
, and as a result thesePath
objects may be passed directly to other APIs that expect simple text representations of paths, whereas withpathlib
, one must first cast values to strings before passing them to APIs that do not honor PEP 519PathLike
interface.path
give quality of life features beyond exposing basic functionality of a path.path
provides methods likermtree
(from shlib) andremove_p
(remove a file if it exists), properties like.permissions
, and sophisticatedwalk
,TempDir
, andchmod
behaviors.- As a PyPI-hosted package,
path
is free to iterate faster than a stdlib package. Contributions are welcome and encouraged. path
provides superior portability using a uniform abstraction over its single Path object, freeing the implementer to subclass it readily. One cannot subclass apathlib.Path
to add functionality, but must subclassPath
,PosixPath
, andWindowsPath
, even to do something as simple as to add a__dict__
to the subclass instances.path
instead allows thePath.module
object to be overridden by subclasses, defaulting to theos.path
. Even advanced uses ofpath.Path
that subclass the model do not need to be concerned with OS-specific nuances.path.Path
objects are inherently "pure", not requiring the author to distinguish between pure and non-pure variants.
This path project has the explicit aim to provide compatibility
with pathlib
objects where possible, such that a path.Path
object is a drop-in replacement for pathlib.Path*
objects.
This project welcomes contributions to improve that compatibility
where it's lacking.
The path.py
project was initially released in 2003 by Jason Orendorff
and has been continuously developed and supported by several maintainers
over the years.
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