~Python ?
Thomas A. Bryan
tbryan at python.net
Tue Dec 26 02:39:37 EST 2000
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Tue Dec 26 02:39:37 EST 2000
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Gerson Kurz wrote: > > On Linux, ~ usually refers to the users homedir, but not so in Python > (at least, in ActivePython 2.0). I found out the hard way when using a > script that issued os.makedirs() relative to ~ - It created an actual > directory named ~. You can have real fun if you try to deleting an > actual directory named ~ on Linux, boy. > > I understand that ~ is probably handled by the shell, but if Python > doesn't deal with it, its hard to use Python in some kinds of scripts. > (I think Perl, Pythons ugly twin-brother, does) Wouldn't os.environ['HOME'] be an acceptable way of handling this problem? I'm not sure whether such a variable is available under other OSs, such as Windows, but at least environment variables are available under Windows. I think that '~' is a foreign concept to non-UNIX users. (ActivePython is a Windows distribution of Python, right?) ---Tom
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