How can I move file into Recycle Bin / trash on different platforms using PyQt4?
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I would like to add the next feature to my cross-platform PyQt4 application: when user selects some file and select "remove" action on it that file will be moved to Recycle Bin folder instead of being permantly removed. I think I can find Windows-specific solution using Win32 API or something similar, but I'd like to know does similar operation could be executed on Ubuntu/Linux and MaxOSX as well via PyQt4 methods.

Seep answered 2/9, 2010 at 15:14 Comment(1)
For those who find this question and are using PyQt5 rather than PyQt4: In Qt 5.15 the QFile.moveToTrash function was added (announcement). I hope this help!Cosignatory
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It's a good thing you're using Python, I created a library to do just that a while ago:

http://www.hardcoded.net/articles/send-files-to-trash-on-all-platforms.htm

On PyPI: Send2Trash

Installation

Using conda:

conda install Send2Trash

Using pip:

pip install Send2Trash

Usage

Delete file or folders

from send2trash import send2trash
send2trash("directory")
Theologize answered 23/1, 2011 at 10:37 Comment(7)
New ctypes-based version of your library looks very handy. ThanksSeep
This is awesome. On OS X it works with the 'Put Back' option (when right clicking a file in the trash). Thanks!Ingest
This should be added to the standard library. Does anyone know the proper mechanism for making that sort of proposal? I wrote something up at bugs.python.org, but I don't feel like that's the proper place to do it: bugs.python.org/issue24185Cooley
it also sends folders to trashMorisco
conda install Send2TrashLesterlesya
'pip install Send2Trash' raises an alarm from the virus scanner complaining that the package contains a trojan.Quiteri
thanks. would be nice if it supported forward slashes / in Windows to make cross platform coding easierThalia
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I guess there really is no cross-platform solution provided by Qt and it's not a totally trivial task to implement the trash concept in Linux since it's slightly different based on which file manager is in use.

Here's a site discussing the trash concept in Nautilus and another one for KDE.

Under Windows you can use the Win32 API like you said. Python solution available here.

Mac OS X puts the trashed files in ~/.Trash similar to other *NIX OSes, but I couldn't quickly Google any documentation for it. It seems that the OS X trash info file is some kind of binary format and not plain text like in Linux.

Symbian doesn't have a desktop concept and thus no trashcan concept either. It might be similar for other mobile platforms.

EDIT: Super User has some discussion revealing that .DS_Store does indeed store information about trashed files, but no specifics about the format.

Hendrickson answered 2/9, 2010 at 18:53 Comment(0)
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The best OSX solution I know uses Applescript. I did not, however, invent it, so I shall simply link to it here.

It would be nice to have a module that packaged up the Win32/KDE/OSX solutions into one, i feel, and imported the correct one on demand. Is that how you solved your problem in the end?

Uncharitable answered 23/1, 2011 at 6:49 Comment(0)

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