Brandon wrote:
On Feb 19, 10:26 am, Krister Svanlund <krister.svanl...@gmail.com>
wrote:
On Fri, Feb 19, 2010 at 5:05 PM, Brandon <btaylordes...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi everyone,
Does copying or moving a file affect the return value of
os.path.getmtime(path)?
Thank you,
Brandon
Wouldn't it be easier to make a script and see for yourself then to
write a mail about it?

Gee, thanks for the help. I guess.

Well, copying the file won't affect the getmtime, since it's still there, and unmodified. Moving it will cause the getmtime to to get an os.error, because the file no longer exists.

Probably you mean you're adjusting the path variable to point to the new location for the file. But the answer is still "it depends." How about if you get more specific? If you write a copy utility using two opens, a read() and a write(), then the new file will certainly get a new timestamp unless you do something to prevent it. If you copy the file from a DOS box in Windows XP, using the COPY command, then the getmtime on the new file will be identical to the one on the old. If you do it on an Amiga using pip, I have no idea.

Perhaps you're writing a copy/move utility of your own, and you want to know how to cause a new file to have the same attributes as the original. If so, be more specific.

DaveA

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