To understand the situation properly, we need to start with the code, the errors, and your apparent conclusions.
First, please start by thinking carefully about what happens at the start of the code. You have:
software_path = "\\\\domain\\dir1\\dir2\\dir3\\script.ps1"
print (software_path)
And you get the result:
\\domain\dir1\dir2\dir3\script.ps1
Because you did not ask about this, I assume that this result matches your expectations. Therefore, I should be able to conclude:
You already understood that the string (the actual string, not your code) contains two backslashes at the start, and one backslash between the folder names - not four and two, respectively.
You already understood that you should write the code that way, with the extra backslashes, in order to get the string you want. (In fact, it would have worked without them, simply because \d
and \s
are not real escape sequences; this is deprecated, and will become an error in some future Python version.)
If you didn't actually understand these things, then you need to be more deliberate about the code that you're writing, and start by looking up the Q&A for the things you actually need to know about, rather than skipping ahead and only trying to ask when you encounter an error message. There is no substitute for actual understanding.
But assuming I'm reading the situation correctly, then you also should know that your opening query doesn't make any sense:
I'm trying to turn \\\\domain\\dir1\\dir2\\dir3\\script.ps1
into \\domain\dir1\dir2\dir3\script.ps1
Well, no, obviously you aren't trying to turn the first thing into the second thing, because you don't have that first thing to begin with.
And since you already have a string that contains one backslash between the folder names, there is obviously not any "change" to make, and no question to ask. Right?
So, my guess is that you got to this situation because you were trying to use the string for something else, and got an error message:
subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command '['powershell', '-Command', '\\domain\\dir1\\dir2\\dir3\\script.ps1']' returned non-zero exit status 1.
And my guess is that you saw \\domain\\dir1\\dir2\\dir3\\script.ps1
and thought "oh, that must be the cause of the error. Wait, why are there two backslashes in between? Shouldn't it be only one?"
But, of course, the string really does use single backslashes. The error message looks like this because it's showing you the string as part of a list, not printing it.
And, of course, the actual reason for the Powershell failure is something completely different. For example, it could be that you aren't supposed to replace the double (what you called "quadruple") backslash at the start of the string because it's supposed to be a UNC path. Or maybe you're missing a drive letter. Or maybe the path is fine but there just isn't actually a script file in the place where you expected it. Or maybe it even found the script fine, and something went wrong while running it.
It's your job to investigate those possibilities before asking. If you aren't at a level where you can do that, you aren't in a place where you can ask a question suitable for Stack Overflow. We don't debug issues, provide tech support, or teach; we answer questions - that are, generally, either about one specific detail of how something works, or about how to do one specific, atomic thing.
If any of the above doesn't make sense to you, then you have asked the wrong question. Instead of asking "how do I do this?", you should have asked "why do I get this result?". This is a common duplicate, and you should read it:
Why do backslashes appear twice?
But assuming I'm still on the right track - that you understood how backslash escaping works in Python string literals, but got an error message from using one, and expected it to be reported back to you without escaping -
- then you were, indeed, confused.
Which is to say, you were temporarily not thinking clearly or logically.
It happens to the best of us. I've been programming for about 35 years and volunteered countless hours on the Internet teaching Python concepts to beginners, and it still happens to me all the time.
There's nothing remotely abusive about pointing this out when it happens. (When it isn't actually what happened, it's even giving you credit for understanding things that you might not have.)
The output of the string really was exactly what you were after, and if you expected different output, then you realistically should have known why that expectation was not reasonable. The other reason why this output would be "not what you were after" is because of the script itself not working. The situation here was your fault because you did not take the appropriate action to verify the other aspects of the situation - for example, whether you could successfully run the script from a Powershell prompt directly.
What deceze proposed you should do (i.e., not attempt to process the string) was in fact completely correct. This was accompanied by correctly telling you that the string shown in the result looked like it's supposed to. This was the "end of story" because there isn't any more to the issue of the string escaping - and any issue you had with running a Powershell command from within your program is completely separate.
The comment "For the same reason you wrote it with four backslashes into your code" was a helpful hint that should have cued you to recognize your confusion: if you have to write four backslashes in the code to get a string that actually has two backslashes, then of course a code-formatted output of a string that actually has one backslash, will display two.
There is nothing at all about this phrasing that could be considered "bullying" or "harassment".
You've been getting further downvotes because a) you apparently aren't listening to what you've been told (which tends to draw more attention to your posts), and b) your question doesn't help contribute to the site (which means people who see your question are liable to downvote it). If you hover over the downvote arrow, you can see the site's reminder text for why questions are downvoted.
It's important to understand that Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum, help desk or anything else like that. We are building a Q&A library, and votes are content rating according to that goal. Good questions are those which help make the library better for everyone - by being something that someone else with a clear, simple, direct question in mind, which is the same question as yours, can realistically find with a search engine and subsequently get an answer.
software_path = "\\\\domain\\dir1\\dir2\\dir3\\script.ps1"
is not a literal string, meaning that you have to escape backslashes. The actual value contains one/two slashes, not two/four:\\domain\dir1\dir2\dir3\script.ps1
. This means that your code does not show the output that you claim it does, and was correctly closed as being "not reproducible". Just edit your question with a minimal reproducible example that does show this "four quote" issue (probably with a string literal) and submit for reopening.print
statement proves thatsoftware_path
already contains the correct string:\\domain\dir1\dir2\dir3\script.ps1
. If this was a correct MRE, it would instead printed the incorrectly escaped string:\\\\domain\\dir1\\dir2\\dir3\\script.ps1
. If your path is being modified when callingcheck_output
, that's a completely different question.x = 5+10; print(x);
with the console displaying15
. The provided example doesn't show the incorrect behaviour, so it's not reproduceable.\x01
. Because of this backslashes also need to be escaped when it outputs. So a single backslash in the source string will be printed as two backslashes in the error message.powershell -Command "script.ps1"
over a network share? Assuming it wouldn't be a duplicate, of course... along with a minimal reproduceable example (python script, file structure, powershell version?)