How can I access the absolute path of the directory containing the current script file in Python? For example, if my script is /home/user/scripts/runner.py
, I would like the output home/user/scripts
.
We can do this using the special __file__
variable along with Python’s built-in library for filesystem path operations, pathlib
. For example:
import pathlib script_directory = pathlib.Path(__file__).parent.resolve() print(script_directory)
The __file__
variable contains the absolute path of the currently executing script. Following the example above, this would be /home/user/scripts/runner.py
. Our code creates a Path
object from this value and accesses its parent
attribute – this will be the script’s containing directory. We then use the resolve
method to make it an absolute path.
The final call to resolve()
is technically only necessary in Python versions prior to 3.9. Before version 3.9, the __file__
variable could contain either an absolute or relative path to the current script, depending on how it was called. Since 3.9, __file__
will always return an absolute path.
Get actionable, code-level insights to resolve Python performance bottlenecks and errors.
Create a free Sentry account
Create a Python project and note your DSN
Grab the Sentry Python SDK
pip install --upgrade sentry-sdk
import sentry_sdk sentry_sdk.init( "https://<key>@sentry.io/<project>", # Set traces_sample_rate to 1.0 to capture 100% # of transactions for performance monitoring. # We recommend adjusting this value in production. traces_sample_rate=1.0, )
Loved by over 4 million developers and more than 90,000 organizations worldwide, Sentry provides code-level observability to many of the world’s best-known companies like Disney, Peloton, Cloudflare, Eventbrite, Slack, Supercell, and Rockstar Games. Each month we process billions of exceptions from the most popular products on the internet.