This is a bit tricky. For instance, the following code:
import sys import os z = sys.argv[0] p = os.path.dirname(z) f = os.path.abspath(p) print "argv[0]={0} , dirname={1} , abspath={2}\n".format(z,p,f)
gives this output on Windows
argv[0]=../zzz.py , dirname=.. , abspath=C:\Users\michael\Downloads First of all, notice that argv has the slash which I typed in the command python ../zzz.py and the absolute path has the normal Windows backslashes. If you need to be cross platform you should probably refrain from putting regular slashes on Python command lines, and use os.sep to refer to the character that separated pathname components.
So far I have only partly answered your question. There are a couple of ways to use the value of f to get what you want. Brute force is to use something like:
targetpath = f + os.sep + ".." + os.sep + ".."
which would result in something like C:\Users\michael\Downloads\..\.. on Windows and /home/michael/../.. on Unix. Each .. goes back one step and is the equivalent of removing the pathname component.
But you could do better by breaking up the path:
target = f.split(os.sep) targetpath = os.sep.join(target[:-2]
and rejoining all but the last two bits to get C:\Users on Windows and / on Unix. If you do that it might be a good idea to check that there are enough pathname components to remove.
Note that I ran the program above by typing python ../xxx.py. In other words I was not in the same working directory as the script, therefore getcwd() would not be useful.