File and Directory Access ************************* The modules described in this chapter deal with disk files and directories. For example, there are modules for reading the properties of files, manipulating paths in a portable way, and creating temporary files. The full list of modules in this chapter is: * "pathlib" --- Object-oriented filesystem paths * Basic use * Pure paths * General properties * Operators * Accessing individual parts * Methods and properties * Concrete paths * Methods * Correspondence to tools in the "os" module * "os.path" --- Common pathname manipulations * "fileinput" --- Iterate over lines from multiple input streams * "stat" --- Interpreting "stat()" results * "filecmp" --- File and Directory Comparisons * The "dircmp" class * "tempfile" --- Generate temporary files and directories * Examples * Deprecated functions and variables * "glob" --- Unix style pathname pattern expansion * "fnmatch" --- Unix filename pattern matching * "linecache" --- Random access to text lines * "shutil" --- High-level file operations * Directory and files operations * Platform-dependent efficient copy operations * copytree example * rmtree example * Archiving operations * Archiving example * Archiving example with *base_dir* * Querying the size of the output terminal See also: Module "os" Operating system interfaces, including functions to work with files at a lower level than Python *file objects*. Module "io" Python's built-in I/O library, including both abstract classes and some concrete classes such as file I/O. Built-in function "open()" The standard way to open files for reading and writing with Python.