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in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

filesystems - How to list only top level directories in Python?

I want to be able to list only the directories inside some folder. This means I don't want filenames listed, nor do I want additional sub-folders.

Let's see if an example helps. In the current directory we have:

>>> os.listdir(os.getcwd())
['cx_Oracle-doc', 'DLLs', 'Doc', 'include', 'Lib', 'libs', 'LICENSE.txt', 'mod_p
ython-wininst.log', 'NEWS.txt', 'pymssql-wininst.log', 'python.exe', 'pythonw.ex
e', 'README.txt', 'Removemod_python.exe', 'Removepymssql.exe', 'Scripts', 'tcl',
 'Tools', 'w9xpopen.exe']

However, I don't want filenames listed. Nor do I want sub-folders such as Libcurses. Essentially what I want works with the following:

>>> for root, dirnames, filenames in os.walk('.'):
...     print dirnames
...     break
...
['cx_Oracle-doc', 'DLLs', 'Doc', 'include', 'Lib', 'libs', 'Scripts', 'tcl', 'Tools']

However, I'm wondering if there's a simpler way of achieving the same results. I get the impression that using os.walk only to return the top level is inefficient/too much.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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by (71.8m points)

os.walk

Use os.walk with next item function:

next(os.walk('.'))[1]

For Python <=2.5 use:

os.walk('.').next()[1]

How this works

os.walk is a generator and calling next will get the first result in the form of a 3-tuple (dirpath, dirnames, filenames). Thus the [1] index returns only the dirnames from that tuple.


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