Reputation: 1131
How do you tell Python where to save a text file?
For example, my computer is running the Python file off my desktop. I want it to save all the text file in my documents folder, not on my desktop. How do I do that in a script like this?
name_of_file = raw_input("What is the name of the file: ")
completeName = name_of_file + ".txt"
#Alter this line in any shape or form it is up to you.
file1 = open(completeName , "w")
toFile = raw_input("Write what you want into the field")
file1.write(toFile)
file1.close()
Upvotes: 103
Views: 606040
Reputation: 11
If you want save file or another some in folder you can use shutil
module from base python library.
import shutil
path_to_file = f'home/user/My_Project/media/{my_file_name}'
path_to_folder = 'home/user/my_folder/'
shutil.copy(path_to_file, path_to_folder)
You can do it ever for some file's list or in Django querysets:
from images.models import Image
import shutil
images = Image.objects.all()
for image in images:
image_path = image.file.path
shutil.copy(image_path, path_to folder)
All your choised files will put in directed folder.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21
Just give your desired path if file does not exist earlier;
from os.path import abspath
with open ('C:\\Users\\Admin\\Desktop\\results.txt', mode = 'w') as final1:
print(final1.write('This is my new file.'))
print(f'Text has been processed and saved at {abspath(final1.name)}')
Output will be:
Text has been processed and saved at C:\Users\Admin\Desktop\results.txt
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 2774
If you want to save a file to a particular DIRECTORY and FILENAME here is some simple example. It also checks to see if the directory has or has not been created.
import os.path
directory = './html/'
filename = "file.html"
file_path = os.path.join(directory, filename)
if not os.path.isdir(directory):
os.mkdir(directory)
file = open(file_path, "w")
file.write(html)
file.close()
Hope this helps you!
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 497
Another simple way without using import OS is,
outFileName="F:\\folder\\folder\\filename.txt"
outFile=open(outFileName, "w")
outFile.write("""Hello my name is ABCD""")
outFile.close()
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 51
Using an absolute or relative string as the filename.
name_of_file = input("What is the name of the file: ")
completeName = '/home/user/Documents'+ name_of_file + ".txt"
file1 = open(completeName , "w")
toFile = input("Write what you want into the field")
file1.write(toFile)
file1.close()
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 579
A small update to this. raw_input()
is renamed as input()
in Python 3.
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 879421
Use os.path.join to combine the path to the Documents
directory with the completeName
(filename?) supplied by the user.
import os
with open(os.path.join('/path/to/Documents',completeName), "w") as file1:
toFile = raw_input("Write what you want into the field")
file1.write(toFile)
If you want the Documents
directory to be relative to the user's home directory, you could use something like:
os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'),'Documents',completeName)
Others have proposed using os.path.abspath
. Note that os.path.abspath
does not resolve '~'
to the user's home directory:
In [10]: cd /tmp
/tmp
In [11]: os.path.abspath("~")
Out[11]: '/tmp/~'
Upvotes: 47
Reputation: 50497
Just use an absolute path when opening the filehandle for writing.
import os.path
save_path = 'C:/example/'
name_of_file = raw_input("What is the name of the file: ")
completeName = os.path.join(save_path, name_of_file+".txt")
file1 = open(completeName, "w")
toFile = raw_input("Write what you want into the field")
file1.write(toFile)
file1.close()
You could optionally combine this with os.path.abspath()
as described in Bryan's answer to automatically get the path of a user's Documents folder. Cheers!
Upvotes: 101