If the reason you're checking is so you can do something like if file_exists: open_it()
, it's safer to use a try
around the attempt to open it. Checking and then opening risks the file being deleted or moved or something between when you check and when you try to open it.
If you're not planning to open the file immediately, you can use os.path.isfile
Return True
if path is an existing regular file. This follows symbolic links, so both islink() and isfile() can be true for the same path.
import os.path
os.path.isfile(fname)
if you need to be sure it's a file.
Starting with Python 3.4, the pathlib
module offers an object-oriented approach (backported to pathlib2
in Python 2.7):
from pathlib import Path
my_file = Path("/path/to/file")
if my_file.is_file():
# file exists
To check a directory, do:
if my_file.is_dir():
# directory exists
To check whether a Path
object exists independently of whether is it a file or directory, use exists()
:
if my_file.exists():
# path exists
You can also use resolve(strict=True)
in a try
block:
try:
my_abs_path = my_file.resolve(strict=True)
except FileNotFoundError:
# doesn't exist
else:
# exists
Best Answer
I just used the following which was quite simple. First open a console then cd to where you've downloaded your file like some-package.whl and use
Note: if pip.exe is not recognized, you may find it in the "Scripts" directory from where python has been installed. If pip is not installed, this page can help: How do I install pip on Windows?
Note: for clarification
If you copy the
*.whl
file to your local drive (ex. C:\some-dir\some-file.whl) use the following command line parameters --