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os
posix
.
When the optional built-in module posix
is available, this
module exports the same functions and data as posix
; otherwise,
it searches for an OS dependent built-in module like mac
and
exports the same functions and data as found there. The design of all
Python's built-in OS dependen modules is such that as long as the same
functionality is available, it uses the same interface; e.g., the
function os.stat(file)
returns stat info about a file in a
format compatible with the POSIX interface.
Extensions peculiar to a particular OS are also available through the
os
module, but using them is of course a threat to portability!
Note that after the first time os
is imported, there is no
performance penalty in using functions from os
instead of
directly from the OS dependent built-in module, so there should be
no reason not to use os
!
In addition to whatever the correct OS dependent module exports, the
following variables and functions are always exported by os
:
'posix'
or
'mac'
.
posixpath
or macpath
. Thus, (given
the proper imports), os.path.split(file)
is equivalent to but
more portable than posixpath.split(file)
.
'.'
for POSIX or ':'
for the Mac.
'..'
for POSIX or '::'
for the Mac.
'/'
for POSIX or ':'
for the Mac. Note that knowing this
is not sufficient to be able to parse or concatenate pathnames---better
use os.path.split()
and os.path.join()
---but it is
occasionally useful.
os.execv
with an argv
of [arg0, arg1, ...]
.
os.execve
with an argv
of [arg0, arg1, ...]
.
execl
but duplicates the shell's actions in
searching for an executable file in a list of directories. The
directory list is obtained from environ['PATH']
.
execvp
is for execv
what execlp
is for execl
.