I\'m writing this simple code:
file = input(\'File to read: \')
fhand = open(file, \'r\')
The file I want to open is called \'test.txt\', and i
you'll have no problems with Python 3 with your exact code (this issue is often encountered when passing windows literal strings where the r prefix is required).
With python 2, first you'll have to wrap your filename with quotes, then all special chars will be interpreted (\t, \n ...). Unless you input r"DB\test.txt" using this raw prefix I was mentionning earlier but it's beginning to become cumbersome :)
So I'd suggest to use raw_input (and don't input text with quotes). Or python version agnostic version to override the unsafe input for python 2 only:
try:
input = raw_input
except NameError:
pass
then your code will work OK and you got rid of possible code injection in your code as a bonus (See python 2 specific topic: Is it ever useful to use Python's input over raw_input?).