so I’m writting a generic backup application with os module and pickle and far I’ve tried the code below to see if something is a file or directory (based on its string input and not its physical contents).
import os, re
def test(path):
prog = re.compile("^[-\w,\s]+.[A-Za-z]{3}$")
result = prog.match(path)
if os.path.isfile(path) or result:
print "is file"
elif os.path.isdir(path):
print "is directory"
else: print "I dont know"
Problems
test("C:/treeOfFunFiles/")
is directory
test("/beach.jpg")
I dont know
test("beach.jpg")
I dont know
test("/directory/")
I dont know
Desired Output
test("C:/treeOfFunFiles/")
is directory
test("/beach.jpg")
is file
test("beach.jpg")
is file
test("/directory/")
is directory
Resources
what regular expression should I be using to tell the difference between what might be a file and what might be a directory? or is there a different way to go about this?
In a character class, if present and meant as a hyphen, the
-needs to either be the first/last character, or escaped\-so change"^[\w-,\s]+\.[A-Za-z]{3}$"to"^[-\w,\s]+\.[A-Za-z]{3}$"for instance.Otherwise, I think using regex’s to determine if something looks like a filename/directory is pointless…
/dev/fd0isn’t a file or directory for instance~/comm.pipecould look like a file but is a named pipe~/images/testis a symbolic link to a file called ‘~/images/holiday/photo1.jpg’Have a look at the
os.pathmodule which have functions that ask the OS what something is…: