How do I find the current directory?
Asked Answered
S

6

16

I am trying to read a file which I read previously successfully. I am reading it through a library, and I am sending it as-is to the library (i.e. "myfile.txt"). I know that the file is read from the working/current directory.

I suspect that the current/working directory has changed somehow. How do i check what is the current/working directory?

Sanies answered 26/1, 2011 at 17:17 Comment(0)
A
25

Since you added the visual-c++ tag I'm going to suggest the standard windows function to do it. GetCurrentDirectory

Usage:

TCHAR pwd[MAX_PATH];
GetCurrentDirectory(MAX_PATH,pwd);
MessageBox(NULL,pwd,pwd,0);
Acervate answered 26/1, 2011 at 17:23 Comment(3)
Interesting. Are you sure it doesn't just write the part that fits in the buffer?Acervate
Really sorry... My program was incorrect.. I just deleted my comments so they wouldn't mislead others. I tested it again: If the buffer size specified is not large enough, the buffer will be kept unmodified and the desired size will be returned.Lamkin
Remember to add #include <Windows.h> to code file before this call.Placenta
I
8

Boost filesystem library provides a clean solution

current_path()
Intercessory answered 26/1, 2011 at 17:28 Comment(0)
F
6

Use _getcwd to get the current working directory.

Footpace answered 26/1, 2011 at 17:19 Comment(0)
A
4

Here's the most platform-agnostic answer I got a while ago:

How return a std::string from C's "getcwd" function

It's pretty long-winded, but does exactly what it's supposed to do, with a nice C++ interface (ie it returns a string, not a how-long-are-you-exactly?-(const) char*).

To shut up MSVC warnings about deprecation of getcwd, you can do a

#if _WIN32
    #define getcwd _getcwd
#endif // _WIN32
Apophasis answered 26/1, 2011 at 17:44 Comment(0)
K
4

This code works for Linux and Windows:

#include <stdio.h>  // defines FILENAME_MAX
#include <unistd.h> // for getcwd()
#include <iostream>

std::string GetCurrentWorkingDir();

int main()
{
   std::string str = GetCurrentWorkingDir();
   std::cout << str;
   return 0;
}
std::string GetCurrentWorkingDir()
{
    std::string cwd("\0",FILENAME_MAX+1);
    return getcwd(&cwd[0],cwd.capacity());
}
Kaleena answered 26/4, 2019 at 13:3 Comment(2)
It doesn't work for me. Error: E1696 cannot open source file "unistd.h". The unistd.h file is not part of C or C++ (cplusplus.com/forum/beginner/59238)Rockaway
Only works if you are using gcc. Does not work if you are using visual studioSprue
C
0

Since C++17, std::filesystem::current_path() can be used.

https://mcmap.net/q/100210/-how-do-i-get-the-directory-that-a-program-is-running-from

Cosine answered 25/10, 2023 at 23:9 Comment(0)

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