QStandardPaths

The QStandardPaths class provides methods for accessing standard paths. More

Inheritance diagram of PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths

New in version 5.0.

Synopsis

Static functions

Detailed Description

This class contains functions to query standard locations on the local filesystem, for common tasks such as user-specific directories or system-wide configuration directories.

class PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths
PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.StandardLocation

This enum describes the different locations that can be queried using methods such as writableLocation , standardLocations , and displayName .

Some of the values in this enum represent a user configuration. Such enum values will return the same paths in different applications, so they could be used to share data with other applications. Other values are specific to this application. Each enum value in the table below describes whether it’s application-specific or generic.

Application-specific directories should be assumed to be unreachable by other applications. Therefore, files placed there might not be readable by other applications, even if run by the same user. On the other hand, generic directories should be assumed to be accessible by all applications run by this user, but should still be assumed to be unreachable by applications by other users.

Data interchange with other users is out of the scope of QStandardPaths .

Constant

Description

QStandardPaths.DesktopLocation

Returns the user’s desktop directory. This is a generic value. On systems with no concept of a desktop, this is the same as .

QStandardPaths.DocumentsLocation

Returns the directory containing user document files. This is a generic value. The returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.FontsLocation

Returns the directory containing user’s fonts. This is a generic value. Note that installing fonts may require additional, platform-specific operations.

QStandardPaths.ApplicationsLocation

Returns the directory containing the user applications (either executables, application bundles, or shortcuts to them). This is a generic value. Note that installing applications may require additional, platform-specific operations. Files, folders or shortcuts in this directory are platform-specific.

QStandardPaths.MusicLocation

Returns the directory containing the user’s music or other audio files. This is a generic value. If no directory specific for music files exists, a sensible fallback for storing user documents is returned.

QStandardPaths.MoviesLocation

Returns the directory containing the user’s movies and videos. This is a generic value. If no directory specific for movie files exists, a sensible fallback for storing user documents is returned.

QStandardPaths.PicturesLocation

Returns the directory containing the user’s pictures or photos. This is a generic value. If no directory specific for picture files exists, a sensible fallback for storing user documents is returned.

QStandardPaths.TempLocation

Returns a directory where temporary files can be stored. The returned value might be application-specific, shared among other applications for this user, or even system-wide. The returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.HomeLocation

Returns the user’s home directory (the same as homePath() ). On Unix systems, this is equal to the HOME environment variable. This value might be generic or application-specific, but the returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.DataLocation

Returns the same value as . This enumeration value is deprecated. Using is preferable since on Windows, the roaming path is recommended.

QStandardPaths.CacheLocation

Returns a directory location where user-specific non-essential (cached) data should be written. This is an application-specific directory. The returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.GenericCacheLocation

Returns a directory location where user-specific non-essential (cached) data, shared across applications, should be written. This is a generic value. Note that the returned path may be empty if the system has no concept of shared cache.

QStandardPaths.GenericDataLocation

Returns a directory location where persistent data shared across applications can be stored. This is a generic value. The returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.RuntimeLocation

Returns a directory location where runtime communication files should be written, like Unix local sockets. This is a generic value. The returned path may be empty on some systems.

QStandardPaths.ConfigLocation

Returns a directory location where user-specific configuration files should be written. This may be either a generic value or application-specific, and the returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.DownloadLocation

Returns a directory for user’s downloaded files. This is a generic value. If no directory specific for downloads exists, a sensible fallback for storing user documents is returned.

QStandardPaths.GenericConfigLocation

Returns a directory location where user-specific configuration files shared between multiple applications should be written. This is a generic value and the returned path is never empty.

QStandardPaths.AppDataLocation

Returns a directory location where persistent application data can be stored. This is an application-specific directory. To obtain a path to store data to be shared with other applications, use . The returned path is never empty. On the Windows operating system, this returns the roaming path. This enum value was added in Qt 5.4.

QStandardPaths.AppLocalDataLocation

Returns the local settings path on the Windows operating system. On all other platforms, it returns the same value as . This enum value was added in Qt 5.4.

QStandardPaths.AppConfigLocation

Returns a directory location where user-specific configuration files should be written. This is an application-specific directory, and the returned path is never empty. This enum value was added in Qt 5.5.

The following table gives examples of paths on different operating systems. The first path is the writable path (unless noted). Other, additional paths, if any, represent non-writable locations.

Path type

macOS

Windows

“~/Desktop”

“C:/Users/<USER>/Desktop”

“~/Documents”

“C:/Users/<USER>/Documents”

“/System/Library/Fonts” (not writable)

“C:/Windows/Fonts” (not writable)

“/Applications” (not writable)

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Roaming/Microsoft/Windows/Start Menu/Programs”

“~/Music”

“C:/Users/<USER>/Music”

“~/Movies”

“C:/Users/<USER>/Videos”

“~/Pictures”

“C:/Users/<USER>/Pictures”

randomly generated by the OS

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/Temp”

“~”

“C:/Users/<USER>”

“~/Library/Application Support/<APPNAME>”, “/Library/Application Support/<APPNAME>”. “<APPDIR>/../Resources”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/<APPNAME>”, “C:/ProgramData/<APPNAME>”, “<APPDIR>”, “<APPDIR>/data”, “<APPDIR>/data/<APPNAME>”

“~/Library/Caches/<APPNAME>”, “/Library/Caches/<APPNAME>”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/<APPNAME>/cache”

“~/Library/Application Support”, “/Library/Application Support”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local”, “C:/ProgramData”, “<APPDIR>”, “<APPDIR>/data”

“~/Library/Application Support”

“C:/Users/<USER>”

“~/Library/Preferences”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/<APPNAME>”, “C:/ProgramData/<APPNAME>”

“~/Library/Preferences”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local”, “C:/ProgramData”

“~/Downloads”

“C:/Users/<USER>/Documents”

“~/Library/Caches”, “/Library/Caches”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/cache”

“~/Library/Application Support/<APPNAME>”, “/Library/Application Support/<APPNAME>”. “<APPDIR>/../Resources”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Roaming/<APPNAME>”, “C:/ProgramData/<APPNAME>”, “<APPDIR>”, “<APPDIR>/data”, “<APPDIR>/data/<APPNAME>”

“~/Library/Application Support/<APPNAME>”, “/Library/Application Support/<APPNAME>”. “<APPDIR>/../Resources”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/<APPNAME>”, “C:/ProgramData/<APPNAME>”, “<APPDIR>”, “<APPDIR>/data”, “<APPDIR>/data/<APPNAME>”

“~/Library/Preferences/<APPNAME>”

“C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/<APPNAME>”, “C:/ProgramData/<APPNAME>”

Path type

Linux

“~/Desktop”

“~/Documents”

“~/.fonts”, “~/.local/share/fonts”, “/usr/local/share/fonts”, “/usr/share/fonts”

“~/.local/share/applications”, “/usr/local/share/applications”, “/usr/share/applications”

“~/Music”

“~/Videos”

“~/Pictures”

“/tmp”

“~”

“~/.local/share/<APPNAME>”, “/usr/local/share/<APPNAME>”, “/usr/share/<APPNAME>”

“~/.cache/<APPNAME>”

“~/.local/share”, “/usr/local/share”, “/usr/share”

“/run/user/<USER>”

“~/.config”, “/etc/xdg”

“~/.config”, “/etc/xdg”

“~/Downloads”

“~/.cache”

“~/.local/share/<APPNAME>”, “/usr/local/share/<APPNAME>”, “/usr/share/<APPNAME>”

“~/.local/share/<APPNAME>”, “/usr/local/share/<APPNAME>”, “/usr/share/<APPNAME>”

“~/.config/<APPNAME>”, “/etc/xdg/<APPNAME>”

Path type

Android

iOS

“<APPROOT>/files”

“<APPROOT>/Documents/Desktop”

“<USER>/Documents”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/Documents”

“<APPROOT>/Documents”

“/system/fonts” (not writable)

“<APPROOT>/Library/Fonts”

not supported (directory not readable)

not supported

“<USER>/Music”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/Music”

“<APPROOT>/Documents/Music”

“<USER>/Movies”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/Movies”

“<APPROOT>/Documents/Movies”

“<USER>/Pictures”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/Pictures”

“<APPROOT>/Documents/Pictures”, “assets-library://”

“<APPROOT>/cache”

“<APPROOT>/tmp”

“<APPROOT>/files”

system defined

“<APPROOT>/files”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/files”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Application Support”

“<APPROOT>/cache”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/cache”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Caches”

“<USER>”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Application Support”

“<APPROOT>/cache”

not supported

“<APPROOT>/files/settings”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Preferences”

“<APPROOT>/files/settings” (there is no shared settings)

“<APPROOT>/Library/Preferences”

“<USER>/Downloads”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/Downloads”

“<APPROOT>/Documents/Downloads”

“<APPROOT>/cache” (there is no shared cache)

“<APPROOT>/Library/Caches”

“<APPROOT>/files”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/files”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Application Support”

“<APPROOT>/files/settings”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Preferences/<APPNAME>”

“<APPROOT>/files”, “<USER>/<APPNAME>/files”

“<APPROOT>/Library/Application Support”

In the table above, <APPNAME> is usually the organization name, the application name, or both, or a unique name generated at packaging. Similarly, <APPROOT> is the location where this application is installed (often a sandbox). <APPDIR> is the directory containing the application executable.

The paths above should not be relied upon, as they may change according to OS configuration, locale, or they may change in future Qt versions.

Note

On Android, applications with open files on the external storage (<USER> locations), will be killed if the external storage is unmounted.

Note

On Android 6.0 (API 23) or higher, the “WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE” permission must be requested at runtime when using writableLocation or standardLocations .

Note

On iOS, if you do pass QStandardPaths::standardLocations(QStandardPaths::PicturesLocation).last() as argument to setDirectory() , a native image picker dialog will be used for accessing the user’s photo album. The filename returned can be loaded using QFile and related APIs. This feature was added in Qt 5.5.

PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.LocateOption

This enum describes the different flags that can be used for controlling the behavior of locate and locateAll .

Constant

Description

QStandardPaths.LocateFile

return only files

QStandardPaths.LocateDirectory

return only directories

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.displayName(type)
Parameters:

typeStandardLocation

Return type:

str

Returns a localized display name for the given location type or an empty QString if no relevant location can be found.

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.enableTestMode(testMode)
Parameters:

testMode – bool

Note

This function is deprecated.

Use setTestModeEnabled

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.findExecutable(executableName[, paths=list()])
Parameters:
  • executableName – str

  • paths – list of strings

Return type:

str

Finds the executable named executableName in the specified paths , or the system paths if paths is empty.

On most operating systems the system path is determined by the PATH environment variable. The directories where to search for the executable can be set in the paths argument. To search in both your own paths and the system paths, call twice, once with paths set and once with paths empty. Symlinks are not resolved in order to preserve behavior for the case of executables whose behavior depends on the name they are invoked with .

Note

On Windows, the usual executable extensions (from the PATHEXT environment variable) are automatically appended. For example, the (“foo”) call finds foo.exe or foo.bat if present.

Returns the absolute file path to the executable, or an empty string if not found.

If the given \n executableName is an absolute path pointing to an executable its clean path is returned.

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.isTestModeEnabled()
Return type:

bool

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.locate(type, fileName[, options=QStandardPaths.LocateFile])
Parameters:
Return type:

str

Finds a file or directory called fileName in the standard locations for type .

The options flag lets you specify whether to look for files or directories. By default, this flag is set to LocateFile .

Returns the absolute path to the first file or directory found, otherwise returns an empty string.

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.locateAll(type, fileName[, options=QStandardPaths.LocateFile])
Parameters:
Return type:

list of strings

Finds all files or directories by the name, fileName , in the standard locations for type .

The options flag lets you specify whether to look for files or directories. By default, this flag is set to LocateFile .

Returns the list of all the files that were found.

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.setTestModeEnabled(testMode)
Parameters:

testMode – bool

If testMode is true , this enables a special “test mode” in QStandardPaths , which changes writable locations to point to test directories. This prevents auto tests from reading or writing to the current user’s configuration.

It affects the locations into which test programs might write files: GenericDataLocation , DataLocation , ConfigLocation , GenericConfigLocation , AppConfigLocation , GenericCacheLocation , and CacheLocation . Other locations are not affected.

On Unix, XDG_DATA_HOME is set to ~/.qttest/share , XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set to ~/.qttest/config , and XDG_CACHE_HOME is set to ~/.qttest/cache .

On macOS, data goes to ~/.qttest/Application Support , cache goes to ~/.qttest/Cache , and config goes to ~/.qttest/Preferences .

On Windows, everything goes to a “qttest” directory under %APPDATA% .

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.standardLocations(type)
Parameters:

typeStandardLocation

Return type:

list of strings

Returns all the directories where files of type belong.

The list of directories is sorted from high to low priority, starting with writableLocation() if it can be determined. This list is empty if no locations for type are defined.

static PySide2.QtCore.QStandardPaths.writableLocation(type)
Parameters:

typeStandardLocation

Return type:

str

Returns the directory where files of type should be written to, or an empty string if the location cannot be determined.

Note

The storage location returned may not exist; that is, it may need to be created by the system or the user.