Have a look at os.listdir and os.stat. I've never worked with 1.5, so
I don't know what will work with it and what won't,. but I'd imagine
the following ought to be fine, though.
stat_list = []
for dirent in os.listdir('you r_directory'):
stat_list.appen d(os.stat(diren t))
Jeff
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 2:33 PM, Brad Navarro <brad.navarro@w ni.comwrote:
I don't know what will work with it and what won't,. but I'd imagine
the following ought to be fine, though.
stat_list = []
for dirent in os.listdir('you r_directory'):
stat_list.appen d(os.stat(diren t))
Jeff
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 2:33 PM, Brad Navarro <brad.navarro@w ni.comwrote:
Greetings,
>
>
>
Being extremely new to Python, I haven't got the experience to figure this
one out on my own and frankly I am not sure I would know where to look.
>
>
>
Basically, what I am trying to do is get a list of each file's attributes
within a directory. Basically, the information that the 'ls –l' command
would give you in a linux shell, except the results for each file in the
directory are stored as a list.
>
>
>
I am presently using version 1.5 on a linux machine. I have kindly requested
my system administrator to upgrade to 2.5.2, but until then I am afraid Iam
stuck with 1.5.
>
>
>
>
>
Thanks,
>
Brad
>
--
>
>
>
>
Being extremely new to Python, I haven't got the experience to figure this
one out on my own and frankly I am not sure I would know where to look.
>
>
>
Basically, what I am trying to do is get a list of each file's attributes
within a directory. Basically, the information that the 'ls –l' command
would give you in a linux shell, except the results for each file in the
directory are stored as a list.
>
>
>
I am presently using version 1.5 on a linux machine. I have kindly requested
my system administrator to upgrade to 2.5.2, but until then I am afraid Iam
stuck with 1.5.
>
>
>
>
>
Thanks,
>
Brad
>
--
>