How do I get the full path of the current file's directory?
The special variable __file__
contains the path to the current file. From that we can get the directory using either Pathlib or the os.path module.
Python 3
For the directory of the script being run:
import pathlib
pathlib.Path(__file__).parent.resolve()
For the current working directory:
import pathlib
pathlib.Path().resolve()
Python 2 and 3
For the directory of the script being run:
import os
os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
If you mean the current working directory:
import os
os.path.abspath(os.getcwd())
Note that before and after file
is two underscores, not just one.
Also note that if you are running interactively or have loaded code from something other than a file (eg: a database or online resource), __file__
may not be set since there is no notion of "current file". The above answer assumes the most common scenario of running a python script that is in a file.
References
- pathlib in the python documentation.
- os.path - Python 2.7, os.path - Python 3
- os.getcwd - Python 2.7, os.getcwd - Python 3
- what does the __file__ variable mean/do?
Using Path
is the recommended way since Python 3:
from pathlib import Path
print("File Path:", Path(__file__).absolute())
print("Directory Path:", Path().absolute()) # Directory of current working directory, not __file__
Documentation: pathlib
Note: If using Jupyter Notebook, __file__
doesn't return expected value, so Path().absolute()
has to be used.
In Python 3.x I do:
from pathlib import Path
path = Path(__file__).parent.absolute()
Explanation:
-
Path(__file__)
is the path to the current file. -
.parent
gives you the directory the file is in. -
.absolute()
gives you the full absolute path to it.
Using pathlib
is the modern way to work with paths. If you need it as a string later for some reason, just do str(path)
.
import os
print os.path.dirname(__file__)
Try this:
import os
dir_path = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__))