pathlib
— Object-oriented filesystem paths¶New in version 3.4.
Source code: Lib/pathlib.py
This module offers classes representing filesystem paths with semantics appropriate for different operating systems. Path classes are divided between pure paths, which provide purely computational operations without I/O, and concrete paths, which inherit from pure paths but also provide I/O operations.
If you’ve never used this module before or just aren’t sure which class is
right for your task, Path
is most likely what you need. It instantiates
a concrete path for the platform the code is running on.
Pure paths are useful in some special cases; for example:
WindowsPath
when running on Unix, but you
can instantiate PureWindowsPath
.See also
PEP 428: The pathlib module – object-oriented filesystem paths.
See also
For low-level path manipulation on strings, you can also use the
os.path
module.
Importing the main class:
>>> from pathlib import Path
Listing subdirectories:
>>> p = Path('.')
>>> [x for x in p.iterdir() if x.is_dir()]
[PosixPath('.hg'), PosixPath('docs'), PosixPath('dist'),
PosixPath('__pycache__'), PosixPath('build')]
Listing Python source files in this directory tree:
>>> list(p.glob('**/*.py'))
[PosixPath('test_pathlib.py'), PosixPath('setup.py'),
PosixPath('pathlib.py'), PosixPath('docs/conf.py'),
PosixPath('build/lib/pathlib.py')]
Navigating inside a directory tree:
>>> p = Path('/etc')
>>> q = p / 'init.d' / 'reboot'
>>> q
PosixPath('/etc/init.d/reboot')
>>> q.resolve()
PosixPath('/etc/rc.d/init.d/halt')
Querying path properties:
>>> q.exists()
True
>>> q.is_dir()
False
Opening a file:
>>> with q.open() as f: f.readline()
...
'#!/bin/bash\n'
Pure path objects provide path-handling operations which don’t actually access a filesystem. There are three ways to access these classes, which we also call flavours:
pathlib.
PurePath
(*pathsegments)¶A generic class that represents the system’s path flavour (instantiating
it creates either a PurePosixPath
or a PureWindowsPath
):
>>> PurePath('setup.py') # Running on a Unix machine
PurePosixPath('setup.py')
Each element of pathsegments can be either a string representing a
path segment, an object implementing the os.PathLike
interface
which returns a string, or another path object:
>>> PurePath('foo', 'some/path', 'bar')
PurePosixPath('foo/some/path/bar')
>>> PurePath(Path('foo'), Path('bar'))
PurePosixPath('foo/bar')
When pathsegments is empty, the current directory is assumed:
>>> PurePath()
PurePosixPath('.')
When several absolute paths are given, the last is taken as an anchor
(mimicking os.path.join()
‘s behaviour):
>>> PurePath('/etc', '/usr', 'lib64')
PurePosixPath('/usr/lib64')
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows', 'd:bar')
PureWindowsPath('d:bar')
However, in a Windows path, changing the local root doesn’t discard the previous drive setting:
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows', '/Program Files')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files')
Spurious slashes and single dots are collapsed, but double dots ('..'
)
are not, since this would change the meaning of a path in the face of
symbolic links:
>>> PurePath('foo//bar')
PurePosixPath('foo/bar')
>>> PurePath('foo/./bar')
PurePosixPath('foo/bar')
>>> PurePath('foo/../bar')
PurePosixPath('foo/../bar')
(a naïve approach would make PurePosixPath('foo/../bar')
equivalent
to PurePosixPath('bar')
, which is wrong if foo
is a symbolic link
to another directory)
Pure path objects implement the os.PathLike
interface, allowing them
to be used anywhere the interface is accepted.
Changed in version 3.6: Added support for the os.PathLike
interface.
pathlib.
PurePosixPath
(*pathsegments)¶A subclass of PurePath
, this path flavour represents non-Windows
filesystem paths:
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc')
PurePosixPath('/etc')
pathsegments is specified similarly to PurePath
.
pathlib.
PureWindowsPath
(*pathsegments)¶A subclass of PurePath
, this path flavour represents Windows
filesystem paths:
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files/')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files')
pathsegments is specified similarly to PurePath
.
Regardless of the system you’re running on, you can instantiate all of these classes, since they don’t provide any operation that does system calls.
Paths are immutable and hashable. Paths of a same flavour are comparable and orderable. These properties respect the flavour’s case-folding semantics:
>>> PurePosixPath('foo') == PurePosixPath('FOO')
False
>>> PureWindowsPath('foo') == PureWindowsPath('FOO')
True
>>> PureWindowsPath('FOO') in { PureWindowsPath('foo') }
True
>>> PureWindowsPath('C:') < PureWindowsPath('d:')
True
Paths of a different flavour compare unequal and cannot be ordered:
>>> PureWindowsPath('foo') == PurePosixPath('foo')
False
>>> PureWindowsPath('foo') < PurePosixPath('foo')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: '<' not supported between instances of 'PureWindowsPath' and 'PurePosixPath'
The slash operator helps create child paths, similarly to os.path.join()
:
>>> p = PurePath('/etc')
>>> p
PurePosixPath('/etc')
>>> p / 'init.d' / 'apache2'
PurePosixPath('/etc/init.d/apache2')
>>> q = PurePath('bin')
>>> '/usr' / q
PurePosixPath('/usr/bin')
A path object can be used anywhere an object implementing os.PathLike
is accepted:
>>> import os
>>> p = PurePath('/etc')
>>> os.fspath(p)
'/etc'
The string representation of a path is the raw filesystem path itself (in native form, e.g. with backslashes under Windows), which you can pass to any function taking a file path as a string:
>>> p = PurePath('/etc')
>>> str(p)
'/etc'
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files')
>>> str(p)
'c:\\Program Files'
Similarly, calling bytes
on a path gives the raw filesystem path as a
bytes object, as encoded by os.fsencode()
:
>>> bytes(p)
b'/etc'
Note
Calling bytes
is only recommended under Unix. Under Windows,
the unicode form is the canonical representation of filesystem paths.
To access the individual “parts” (components) of a path, use the following property:
PurePath.
parts
¶A tuple giving access to the path’s various components:
>>> p = PurePath('/usr/bin/python3')
>>> p.parts
('/', 'usr', 'bin', 'python3')
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files/PSF')
>>> p.parts
('c:\\', 'Program Files', 'PSF')
(note how the drive and local root are regrouped in a single part)
Pure paths provide the following methods and properties:
PurePath.
drive
¶A string representing the drive letter or name, if any:
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files/').drive
'c:'
>>> PureWindowsPath('/Program Files/').drive
''
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc').drive
''
UNC shares are also considered drives:
>>> PureWindowsPath('//host/share/foo.txt').drive
'\\\\host\\share'
PurePath.
root
¶A string representing the (local or global) root, if any:
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files/').root
'\\'
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:Program Files/').root
''
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc').root
'/'
UNC shares always have a root:
>>> PureWindowsPath('//host/share').root
'\\'
PurePath.
anchor
¶The concatenation of the drive and root:
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files/').anchor
'c:\\'
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:Program Files/').anchor
'c:'
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc').anchor
'/'
>>> PureWindowsPath('//host/share').anchor
'\\\\host\\share\\'
PurePath.
parents
¶An immutable sequence providing access to the logical ancestors of the path:
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/foo/bar/setup.py')
>>> p.parents[0]
PureWindowsPath('c:/foo/bar')
>>> p.parents[1]
PureWindowsPath('c:/foo')
>>> p.parents[2]
PureWindowsPath('c:/')
PurePath.
parent
¶The logical parent of the path:
>>> p = PurePosixPath('/a/b/c/d')
>>> p.parent
PurePosixPath('/a/b/c')
You cannot go past an anchor, or empty path:
>>> p = PurePosixPath('/')
>>> p.parent
PurePosixPath('/')
>>> p = PurePosixPath('.')
>>> p.parent
PurePosixPath('.')
Note
This is a purely lexical operation, hence the following behaviour:
>>> p = PurePosixPath('foo/..')
>>> p.parent
PurePosixPath('foo')
If you want to walk an arbitrary filesystem path upwards, it is
recommended to first call Path.resolve()
so as to resolve
symlinks and eliminate ”..” components.
PurePath.
name
¶A string representing the final path component, excluding the drive and root, if any:
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library/setup.py').name
'setup.py'
UNC drive names are not considered:
>>> PureWindowsPath('//some/share/setup.py').name
'setup.py'
>>> PureWindowsPath('//some/share').name
''
PurePath.
suffix
¶The file extension of the final component, if any:
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library/setup.py').suffix
'.py'
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library.tar.gz').suffix
'.gz'
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library').suffix
''
PurePath.
suffixes
¶A list of the path’s file extensions:
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library.tar.gar').suffixes
['.tar', '.gar']
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library.tar.gz').suffixes
['.tar', '.gz']
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library').suffixes
[]
PurePath.
stem
¶The final path component, without its suffix:
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library.tar.gz').stem
'library.tar'
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library.tar').stem
'library'
>>> PurePosixPath('my/library').stem
'library'
PurePath.
as_posix
()¶Return a string representation of the path with forward slashes (/
):
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:\\windows')
>>> str(p)
'c:\\windows'
>>> p.as_posix()
'c:/windows'
PurePath.
as_uri
()¶Represent the path as a file
URI. ValueError
is raised if
the path isn’t absolute.
>>> p = PurePosixPath('/etc/passwd')
>>> p.as_uri()
'file:///etc/passwd'
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows')
>>> p.as_uri()
'file:///c:/Windows'
PurePath.
is_absolute
()¶Return whether the path is absolute or not. A path is considered absolute if it has both a root and (if the flavour allows) a drive:
>>> PurePosixPath('/a/b').is_absolute()
True
>>> PurePosixPath('a/b').is_absolute()
False
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/a/b').is_absolute()
True
>>> PureWindowsPath('/a/b').is_absolute()
False
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:').is_absolute()
False
>>> PureWindowsPath('//some/share').is_absolute()
True
PurePath.
is_reserved
()¶With PureWindowsPath
, return True
if the path is considered
reserved under Windows, False
otherwise. With PurePosixPath
,
False
is always returned.
>>> PureWindowsPath('nul').is_reserved()
True
>>> PurePosixPath('nul').is_reserved()
False
File system calls on reserved paths can fail mysteriously or have unintended effects.
PurePath.
joinpath
(*other)¶Calling this method is equivalent to combining the path with each of the other arguments in turn:
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc').joinpath('passwd')
PurePosixPath('/etc/passwd')
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc').joinpath(PurePosixPath('passwd'))
PurePosixPath('/etc/passwd')
>>> PurePosixPath('/etc').joinpath('init.d', 'apache2')
PurePosixPath('/etc/init.d/apache2')
>>> PureWindowsPath('c:').joinpath('/Program Files')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Program Files')
PurePath.
match
(pattern)¶Match this path against the provided glob-style pattern. Return True
if matching is successful, False
otherwise.
If pattern is relative, the path can be either relative or absolute, and matching is done from the right:
>>> PurePath('a/b.py').match('*.py')
True
>>> PurePath('/a/b/c.py').match('b/*.py')
True
>>> PurePath('/a/b/c.py').match('a/*.py')
False
If pattern is absolute, the path must be absolute, and the whole path must match:
>>> PurePath('/a.py').match('/*.py')
True
>>> PurePath('a/b.py').match('/*.py')
False
As with other methods, case-sensitivity is observed:
>>> PureWindowsPath('b.py').match('*.PY')
True
PurePath.
relative_to
(*other)¶Compute a version of this path relative to the path represented by other. If it’s impossible, ValueError is raised:
>>> p = PurePosixPath('/etc/passwd')
>>> p.relative_to('/')
PurePosixPath('etc/passwd')
>>> p.relative_to('/etc')
PurePosixPath('passwd')
>>> p.relative_to('/usr')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "pathlib.py", line 694, in relative_to
.format(str(self), str(formatted)))
ValueError: '/etc/passwd' does not start with '/usr'
PurePath.
with_name
(name)¶Return a new path with the name
changed. If the original path
doesn’t have a name, ValueError is raised:
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.gz')
>>> p.with_name('setup.py')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/setup.py')
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/')
>>> p.with_name('setup.py')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/home/antoine/cpython/default/Lib/pathlib.py", line 751, in with_name
raise ValueError("%r has an empty name" % (self,))
ValueError: PureWindowsPath('c:/') has an empty name
PurePath.
with_suffix
(suffix)¶Return a new path with the suffix
changed. If the original path
doesn’t have a suffix, the new suffix is appended instead:
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.gz')
>>> p.with_suffix('.bz2')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.bz2')
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('README')
>>> p.with_suffix('.txt')
PureWindowsPath('README.txt')
Concrete paths are subclasses of the pure path classes. In addition to operations provided by the latter, they also provide methods to do system calls on path objects. There are three ways to instantiate concrete paths:
pathlib.
Path
(*pathsegments)¶A subclass of PurePath
, this class represents concrete paths of
the system’s path flavour (instantiating it creates either a
PosixPath
or a WindowsPath
):
>>> Path('setup.py')
PosixPath('setup.py')
pathsegments is specified similarly to PurePath
.
pathlib.
PosixPath
(*pathsegments)¶A subclass of Path
and PurePosixPath
, this class
represents concrete non-Windows filesystem paths:
>>> PosixPath('/etc')
PosixPath('/etc')
pathsegments is specified similarly to PurePath
.
pathlib.
WindowsPath
(*pathsegments)¶A subclass of Path
and PureWindowsPath
, this class
represents concrete Windows filesystem paths:
>>> WindowsPath('c:/Program Files/')
WindowsPath('c:/Program Files')
pathsegments is specified similarly to PurePath
.
You can only instantiate the class flavour that corresponds to your system (allowing system calls on non-compatible path flavours could lead to bugs or failures in your application):
>>> import os
>>> os.name
'posix'
>>> Path('setup.py')
PosixPath('setup.py')
>>> PosixPath('setup.py')
PosixPath('setup.py')
>>> WindowsPath('setup.py')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "pathlib.py", line 798, in __new__
% (cls.__name__,))
NotImplementedError: cannot instantiate 'WindowsPath' on your system
Concrete paths provide the following methods in addition to pure paths
methods. Many of these methods can raise an OSError
if a system
call fails (for example because the path doesn’t exist):
Path.
cwd
()¶Return a new path object representing the current directory (as returned
by os.getcwd()
):
>>> Path.cwd()
PosixPath('/home/antoine/pathlib')
Path.
home
()¶Return a new path object representing the user’s home directory (as
returned by os.path.expanduser()
with ~
construct):
>>> Path.home()
PosixPath('/home/antoine')
New in version 3.5.
Path.
stat
()¶Return information about this path (similarly to os.stat()
).
The result is looked up at each call to this method.
>>> p = Path('setup.py')
>>> p.stat().st_size
956
>>> p.stat().st_mtime
1327883547.852554
Path.
chmod
(mode)¶Change the file mode and permissions, like os.chmod()
:
>>> p = Path('setup.py')
>>> p.stat().st_mode
33277
>>> p.chmod(0o444)
>>> p.stat().st_mode
33060
Path.
exists
()¶Whether the path points to an existing file or directory:
>>> Path('.').exists()
True
>>> Path('setup.py').exists()
True
>>> Path('/etc').exists()
True
>>> Path('nonexistentfile').exists()
False
Note
If the path points to a symlink, exists()
returns whether the
symlink points to an existing file or directory.
Path.
expanduser
()¶Return a new path with expanded ~
and ~user
constructs,
as returned by os.path.expanduser()
:
>>> p = PosixPath('~/films/Monty Python')
>>> p.expanduser()
PosixPath('/home/eric/films/Monty Python')
New in version 3.5.
Path.
glob
(pattern)¶Glob the given pattern in the directory represented by this path, yielding all matching files (of any kind):
>>> sorted(Path('.').glob('*.py'))
[PosixPath('pathlib.py'), PosixPath('setup.py'), PosixPath('test_pathlib.py')]
>>> sorted(Path('.').glob('*/*.py'))
[PosixPath('docs/conf.py')]
The “**
” pattern means “this directory and all subdirectories,
recursively”. In other words, it enables recursive globbing:
>>> sorted(Path('.').glob('**/*.py'))
[PosixPath('build/lib/pathlib.py'),
PosixPath('docs/conf.py'),
PosixPath('pathlib.py'),
PosixPath('setup.py'),
PosixPath('test_pathlib.py')]
Note
Using the “**
” pattern in large directory trees may consume
an inordinate amount of time.
Path.
group
()¶Return the name of the group owning the file. KeyError
is raised
if the file’s gid isn’t found in the system database.
Path.
is_dir
()¶Return True
if the path points to a directory (or a symbolic link
pointing to a directory), False
if it points to another kind of file.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist or is a broken symlink;
other errors (such as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
is_file
()¶Return True
if the path points to a regular file (or a symbolic link
pointing to a regular file), False
if it points to another kind of file.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist or is a broken symlink;
other errors (such as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
is_symlink
()¶Return True
if the path points to a symbolic link, False
otherwise.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist; other errors (such
as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
is_socket
()¶Return True
if the path points to a Unix socket (or a symbolic link
pointing to a Unix socket), False
if it points to another kind of file.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist or is a broken symlink;
other errors (such as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
is_fifo
()¶Return True
if the path points to a FIFO (or a symbolic link
pointing to a FIFO), False
if it points to another kind of file.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist or is a broken symlink;
other errors (such as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
is_block_device
()¶Return True
if the path points to a block device (or a symbolic link
pointing to a block device), False
if it points to another kind of file.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist or is a broken symlink;
other errors (such as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
is_char_device
()¶Return True
if the path points to a character device (or a symbolic link
pointing to a character device), False
if it points to another kind of file.
False
is also returned if the path doesn’t exist or is a broken symlink;
other errors (such as permission errors) are propagated.
Path.
iterdir
()¶When the path points to a directory, yield path objects of the directory contents:
>>> p = Path('docs')
>>> for child in p.iterdir(): child
...
PosixPath('docs/conf.py')
PosixPath('docs/_templates')
PosixPath('docs/make.bat')
PosixPath('docs/index.rst')
PosixPath('docs/_build')
PosixPath('docs/_static')
PosixPath('docs/Makefile')
Path.
lchmod
(mode)¶Like Path.chmod()
but, if the path points to a symbolic link, the
symbolic link’s mode is changed rather than its target’s.
Path.
lstat
()¶Like Path.stat()
but, if the path points to a symbolic link, return
the symbolic link’s information rather than its target’s.
Path.
mkdir
(mode=0o777, parents=False, exist_ok=False)¶Create a new directory at this given path. If mode is given, it is
combined with the process’ umask
value to determine the file mode
and access flags. If the path already exists, FileExistsError
is raised.
If parents is true, any missing parents of this path are created
as needed; they are created with the default permissions without taking
mode into account (mimicking the POSIX mkdir -p
command).
If parents is false (the default), a missing parent raises
FileNotFoundError
.
If exist_ok is false (the default), FileExistsError
is
raised if the target directory already exists.
If exist_ok is true, FileExistsError
exceptions will be
ignored (same behavior as the POSIX mkdir -p
command), but only if the
last path component is not an existing non-directory file.
Changed in version 3.5: The exist_ok parameter was added.
Path.
open
(mode='r', buffering=-1, encoding=None, errors=None, newline=None)¶Open the file pointed to by the path, like the built-in open()
function does:
>>> p = Path('setup.py')
>>> with p.open() as f:
... f.readline()
...
'#!/usr/bin/env python3\n'
Path.
owner
()¶Return the name of the user owning the file. KeyError
is raised
if the file’s uid isn’t found in the system database.
Path.
read_bytes
()¶Return the binary contents of the pointed-to file as a bytes object:
>>> p = Path('my_binary_file')
>>> p.write_bytes(b'Binary file contents')
20
>>> p.read_bytes()
b'Binary file contents'
New in version 3.5.
Path.
read_text
(encoding=None, errors=None)¶Return the decoded contents of the pointed-to file as a string:
>>> p = Path('my_text_file')
>>> p.write_text('Text file contents')
18
>>> p.read_text()
'Text file contents'
The optional parameters have the same meaning as in open()
.
New in version 3.5.
Path.
rename
(target)¶Rename this file or directory to the given target. On Unix, if target exists and is a file, it will be replaced silently if the user has permission. target can be either a string or another path object:
>>> p = Path('foo')
>>> p.open('w').write('some text')
9
>>> target = Path('bar')
>>> p.rename(target)
>>> target.open().read()
'some text'
Path.
replace
(target)¶Rename this file or directory to the given target. If target points to an existing file or directory, it will be unconditionally replaced.
Path.
resolve
(strict=False)¶Make the path absolute, resolving any symlinks. A new path object is returned:
>>> p = Path()
>>> p
PosixPath('.')
>>> p.resolve()
PosixPath('/home/antoine/pathlib')
“..
” components are also eliminated (this is the only method to do so):
>>> p = Path('docs/../setup.py')
>>> p.resolve()
PosixPath('/home/antoine/pathlib/setup.py')
If the path doesn’t exist and strict is True
, FileNotFoundError
is raised. If strict is False
, the path is resolved as far as possible
and any remainder is appended without checking whether it exists. If an
infinite loop is encountered along the resolution path, RuntimeError
is raised.
New in version 3.6: The strict argument.
Path.
rglob
(pattern)¶This is like calling Path.glob()
with “**
” added in front of the
given pattern:
>>> sorted(Path().rglob("*.py"))
[PosixPath('build/lib/pathlib.py'),
PosixPath('docs/conf.py'),
PosixPath('pathlib.py'),
PosixPath('setup.py'),
PosixPath('test_pathlib.py')]
Path.
rmdir
()¶Remove this directory. The directory must be empty.
Path.
samefile
(other_path)¶Return whether this path points to the same file as other_path, which
can be either a Path object, or a string. The semantics are similar
to os.path.samefile()
and os.path.samestat()
.
An OSError
can be raised if either file cannot be accessed for some
reason.
>>> p = Path('spam')
>>> q = Path('eggs')
>>> p.samefile(q)
False
>>> p.samefile('spam')
True
New in version 3.5.
Path.
symlink_to
(target, target_is_directory=False)¶Make this path a symbolic link to target. Under Windows,
target_is_directory must be true (default False
) if the link’s target
is a directory. Under POSIX, target_is_directory‘s value is ignored.
>>> p = Path('mylink')
>>> p.symlink_to('setup.py')
>>> p.resolve()
PosixPath('/home/antoine/pathlib/setup.py')
>>> p.stat().st_size
956
>>> p.lstat().st_size
8
Note
The order of arguments (link, target) is the reverse
of os.symlink()
‘s.
Path.
touch
(mode=0o666, exist_ok=True)¶Create a file at this given path. If mode is given, it is combined
with the process’ umask
value to determine the file mode and access
flags. If the file already exists, the function succeeds if exist_ok
is true (and its modification time is updated to the current time),
otherwise FileExistsError
is raised.
Path.
unlink
()¶Remove this file or symbolic link. If the path points to a directory,
use Path.rmdir()
instead.
Path.
write_bytes
(data)¶Open the file pointed to in bytes mode, write data to it, and close the file:
>>> p = Path('my_binary_file')
>>> p.write_bytes(b'Binary file contents')
20
>>> p.read_bytes()
b'Binary file contents'
An existing file of the same name is overwritten.
New in version 3.5.
Path.
write_text
(data, encoding=None, errors=None)¶Open the file pointed to in text mode, write data to it, and close the file:
>>> p = Path('my_text_file')
>>> p.write_text('Text file contents')
18
>>> p.read_text()
'Text file contents'
New in version 3.5.