Hi, I wanted to figure out whether a given path name is below another path name.
Surprisingly this turned out to be more difficult than initially anticipated: Let's assume I want to find out, whether path1 is below path2 First I thought about checking whether path1 starts with path2 For this I had to - convert path1 / path2 to absolute paths - I had to normalize the path name Further this would still fail for path1='/tmp/dir11' and path2='/tmp/dir1' next option would be to split both absolute and normalized paths by os.sep and check whether the path2's split list starts with path1's split list. That should work but is also not really nice. finally I came up with: ################################################# import os def is_below_dir(fname,topdir): relpath = os.path.relpath(fname,topdir) return not relpath.startswith('..'+os.sep) print is_below_dir(path1,path2) ################################################# The basic idea is, if the path name of path1 relative to path2 does NOT start with '..', then it must be below path2 Does anybody see pitfalls with that solution? Is there by any chance a function, that I overlooked, which does already what I'd like to do? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list