Question

In Python, suppose I have a path like this:

/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/

How can I get just the folderD part?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Use os.path.normpath, then os.path.basename:

>>> os.path.basename(os.path.normpath('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/'))
'folderD'

The first strips off any trailing slashes, the second gives you the last part of the path. Using only basename gives everything after the last slash, which in this case is ''.

OTHER TIPS

You could do

>>> import os
>>> os.path.basename('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD')

UPDATE1: This approach works in case you give it /folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/xx.py. This gives xx.py as the basename. Which is not what you want I guess. So you could do this -

>>> import os
>>> path = "/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD"
>>> if os.path.isdir(path):
        dirname = os.path.basename(path)

UPDATE2: As lars pointed out, making changes so as to accomodate trailing '/'.

>>> from os.path import normpath, basename
>>> basename(normpath('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/'))
'folderD'

Here is my approach:

>>> import os
>>> print os.path.basename(
        os.path.dirname('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/test.py'))
folderD
>>> print os.path.basename(
        os.path.dirname('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/'))
folderD
>>> print os.path.basename(
        os.path.dirname('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD'))
folderC

With python 3 you can use the pathlib module (pathlib.PurePath for example):

>>> import pathlib

>>> path = pathlib.PurePath('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/')
>>> path.name
'folderD'

If you want the last folder name where a file is located:

>>> path = pathlib.PurePath('/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/file.py')
>>> path.parent.name
'folderD'

I was searching for a solution to get the last foldername where the file is located, i just used split two times, to get the right part. It's not the question but google transfered me here.

pathname = "/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/filename.py"
head, tail = os.path.split(os.path.split(pathname)[0])
print(head + "   "  + tail)

A naive solution(Python 2.5.2+):

s="/path/to/any/folder/orfile"
desired_dir_or_file = s[s.rindex('/',0,-1)+1:-1] if s.endswith('/') else s[s.rindex('/')+1:]
path = "/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/"
last = path.split('/').pop()
str = "/folderA/folderB/folderC/folderD/"
print str.split("/")[-2]
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