In python you can create a tempfile as follows:
tempfile.TemporaryFile()
And then you can write to it. Where is the file written in a GNU/L
Looking at .name
on a file handle is indeed one way to see where the file exists. In the case of TemporaryFile (on *NIX systems), you'll see <fdopen>
, indicating an open file handle, but no corresponding directory entry. You'll need to use NamedTemporaryFile if you'd like to preserve the link to the underlying file.
If you wish to control where temporary files go, look at the dir
parameter:
TemporaryFile uses mkstemp, which allows setting the directory with the dir
parameter:
If
dir
is specified, the file will be created in that directory; otherwise, a default directory is used. The default directory is chosen from a platform-dependent list, but the user of the application can control the directory location by setting theTMPDIR
,TEMP
orTMP
environment variables.
on the shell try this
$python
>>> import tempfile
>>>tempfile.gettempdir()
'/var/folders/5r/lxh8g5ln7zg43_l_3t0j7b1c0000gn/T'
This will show you the actual temp path python is using.
You can optionally try this. (this will produce the same result as above)
$python
>>> import tempfile
>>>tempfile.tempdir
'/var/folders/5r/lxh8g5ln7zg43_l_3t0j7b1c0000gn/T'
Call the tempfile.gettempdir() function:
Return the directory currently selected to create temporary files in.
You can change where temporary files are created by setting the tempfile.tempdir value to different directory if you want to influence where temporary files are created. Quoting from the documentation, if that value is None
the rules are as follows:
If tempdir is unset or
None
at any call to any of the above functions, Python searches a standard list of directories and sets tempdir to the first one which the calling user can create files in. The list is:
- The directory named by the
TMPDIR
environment variable.- The directory named by the
TEMP
environment variable.- The directory named by the
TMP
environment variable.- A platform-specific location:
- On RiscOS, the directory named by the
Wimp$ScrapDir
environment variable.- On Windows, the directories
C:\TEMP
,C:\TMP
,\TEMP
, and\TMP
, in that order.- On all other platforms, the directories
/tmp
,/var/tmp
, and/usr/tmp
, in that order.- As a last resort, the current working directory.