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This code was taken from https://github.com/ActiveState/appdirs and modified
to suit our purposes.
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Return full path to the user-specific cache dir for this application.
"appname" is the name of application.
Typical user cache directories are:
macOS: ~/Library/Caches/<AppName>
Unix: ~/.cache/<AppName> (XDG default)
Windows: C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppName>\Cache
On Windows the only suggestion in the MSDN docs is that local settings go
in the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` directory. This is identical to the
non-roaming app data dir (the default returned by `user_data_dir`). Apps
typically put cache data somewhere *under* the given dir here. Some
examples:
...\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\<ProfileName>\Cache
...\Acme\SuperApp\Cache\1.0
OPINION: This function appends "Cache" to the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` value.
�CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATAZCache�darwinz~/Library/CachesZXDG_CACHE_HOMEz~/.cache)r�os�path�normpath�_get_win_folderr�
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Return full path to the user-specific data dir for this application.
"appname" is the name of application.
If None, just the system directory is returned.
"roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
sync'd on login. See
<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
for a discussion of issues.
Typical user data directories are:
macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/<AppName>
Unix: ~/.local/share/<AppName> # or in
$XDG_DATA_HOME, if defined
Win XP (not roaming): C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\ ...
...Application Data\<AppName>
Win XP (roaming): C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local ...
...Settings\Application Data\<AppName>
Win 7 (not roaming): C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppName>
Win 7 (roaming): C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\<AppName>
For Unix, we follow the XDG spec and support $XDG_DATA_HOME.
That means, by default "~/.local/share/<AppName>".
�
CSIDL_APPDATArrz~/Library/Application Support/Z
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rTcCsHtrt||d�}n2tjdkr&t|�}ntjdtd��}tjj||�}|S)arReturn full path to the user-specific config dir for this application.
"appname" is the name of application.
If None, just the system directory is returned.
"roaming" (boolean, default True) can be set False to not use the
Windows roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a
Windows network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
sync'd on login. See
<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
for a discussion of issues.
Typical user data directories are:
macOS: same as user_data_dir
Unix: ~/.config/<AppName>
Win *: same as user_data_dir
For Unix, we follow the XDG spec and support $XDG_CONFIG_HOME.
That means, by default "~/.config/<AppName>".
)rrZXDG_CONFIG_HOMEz ~/.config) rrrrr rrr
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rrr�user_config_dirjs
rcs�tr&tjjtd��}tjj|��g}nVtjdkrBtjjd��g}n:tjdd�}|rn�fdd�|j tj
�D�}ng}|jd�|S) a�Return a list of potential user-shared config dirs for this application.
"appname" is the name of application.
Typical user config directories are:
macOS: /Library/Application Support/<AppName>/
Unix: /etc or $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS[i]/<AppName>/ for each value in
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application ...
...Data\<AppName> Vista: (Fail! "C:\ProgramData" is a hidden *system* directory
on Vista.)
Win 7: Hidden, but writeable on Win 7:
C:\ProgramData\<AppName> �CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATArz/Library/Application SupportZXDG_CONFIG_DIRSz/etc/xdgcsg|]}tjjt|����qSr)r r
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This is a fallback technique at best. I'm not sure if using the
registry for this guarantees us the correct answer for all CSIDL_*
names.
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r,YqXqW|S)a�Encode Windows paths to bytes. Only used on Python 2.
Motivation is to be consistent with other operating systems where paths
are also returned as bytes. This avoids problems mixing bytes and Unicode
elsewhere in the codebase. For more details and discussion see
<https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/3463>.
If encoding using ASCII and MBCS fails, return the original Unicode path.
�ASCII�MBCS)r3r4)�encode�UnicodeEncodeError�LookupError)r
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