Stef Mientki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > It looks like sometimes a single backslash is replaced by a double backslash, > but sometimes it's not ??? > See the error message below, > the first backslash is somewhere (not explicitly in my code) replaced, > but the second is not ??? > Is it in general better to use double backslash in filepaths ? [...] > IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: > 'D:\\data_to_test\test_global.pd'
'\t' is the tab character. '\d' is not a valid escape sequence, so the backslash there survives intact. repr() normalises the string on output, so the (single!) backslash in '\d' is displayed, as always in the repr of strings, as '\\'. You should either use this: 'D:\\data_to_test\\test_global.pd' Or this: r'D:\data_to_test\test_global.pd' See also: http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general/#why-can-t-raw-strings-r-strings-end-with-a-backslash Or even this, which will work unless you're using crufty software that doesn't like slash path separators (cmd.exe being one of those pieces of software): 'D:/data_to_test/test_global.pd' John -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list