Introducing Gradio 5.0

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  1. Helpers
  2. set_static_paths

New to Gradio? Start here: Getting Started

See the Release History

To install Gradio from main, run the following command:

pip install https://gradio-builds.s3.amazonaws.com/ac9bf5ec9208b92579f36ee94a247ae3e676c02f/gradio-5.6.0-py3-none-any.whl

*Note: Setting share=True in launch() will not work.

set_static_paths

gradio.set_static_paths(···)

Description

Set the static paths to be served by the gradio app.
Static files are are served directly from the file system instead of being copied. They are served to users with The Content-Disposition HTTP header set to "inline" when sending these files to users. This indicates that the file should be displayed directly in the browser window if possible. This function is useful when you want to serve files that you know will not be modified during the lifetime of the gradio app (like files used in gr.Examples). By setting static paths, your app will launch faster and it will consume less disk space. Calling this function will set the static paths for all gradio applications defined in the same interpreter session until it is called again or the session ends.

Example Usage

import gradio as gr

# Paths can be a list of strings or pathlib.Path objects
# corresponding to filenames or directories.
gr.set_static_paths(paths=["test/test_files/"])

# The example files and the default value of the input
# will not be copied to the gradio cache and will be served directly.
demo = gr.Interface(
    lambda s: s.rotate(45),
    gr.Image(value="test/test_files/cheetah1.jpg", type="pil"),
    gr.Image(),
    examples=["test/test_files/bus.png"],
)

demo.launch()

Initialization

Parameters
paths: list[str | Path]

List of filepaths or directory names to be served by the gradio app. If it is a directory name, ALL files located within that directory will be considered static and not moved to the gradio cache. This also means that ALL files in that directory will be accessible over the network.