1
0
mirror of https://github.com/arsenetar/send2trash.git synced 2024-11-14 11:39:03 +00:00
send2trash/README.rst
Andrew Senetar 84c220cbd9
Change extra requires to filter on platform
Also created one extra `nativeLib` to replace the orignal two.  Will remove
the others after a couple releases.
2021-08-07 21:04:40 -05:00

57 lines
2.2 KiB
ReStructuredText

==================================================
Send2Trash -- Send files to trash on all platforms
==================================================
Send2Trash is a small package that sends files to the Trash (or Recycle Bin) *natively* and on
*all platforms*. On OS X, it uses native ``FSMoveObjectToTrashSync`` Cocoa calls or can use pyobjc
with NSFileManager. On Windows, it uses native ``IFileOperation`` call if on Vista or newer and
pywin32 is installed or falls back to ``SHFileOperation`` calls. On other platforms, if `PyGObject`_
and `GIO`_ are available, it will use this. Otherwise, it will fallback to its own implementation of
the `trash specifications from freedesktop.org`_.
``ctypes`` is used to access native libraries, so no compilation is necessary.
Send2Trash supports Python 2.7 and up (Python 3 is supported).
Status: Additional Help Welcome
-------------------------------
Additional help is welcome for supporting this package. Specifically help with the OSX and Linux
issues and fixes would be most appreciated.
Installation
------------
You can download it with pip:
python -m pip install -U send2trash
To install with pywin32 or pyobjc required specify the extra `nativeLib`:
python -m pip install -U send2trash[nativeLib]
or you can download the source from http://github.com/arsenetar/send2trash and install it with::
>>> python setup.py install
Usage
-----
>>> from send2trash import send2trash
>>> send2trash('some_file')
>>> send2trash(['some_file1', 'some_file2'])
On Freedesktop platforms (Linux, BSD, etc.), you may not be able to efficiently
trash some files. In these cases, an exception ``send2trash.TrashPermissionError``
is raised, so that the application can handle this case. This inherits from
``PermissionError`` (``OSError`` on Python 2). Specifically, this affects
files on a different device to the user's home directory, where the root of the
device does not have a ``.Trash`` directory, and we don't have permission to
create a ``.Trash-$UID`` directory.
For any other problem, ``OSError`` is raised.
.. _PyGObject: https://wiki.gnome.org/PyGObject
.. _GIO: https://developer.gnome.org/gio/
.. _trash specifications from freedesktop.org: http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/trash-spec/