Manpages - File_Basename.3perl
Table of Contents
NAME
:Basename - Parse file paths into directory, filename and suffix.
SYNOPSIS
use :Basename; ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist); $name = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist); $basename = basename($fullname,@suffixlist); $dirname = dirname($fullname);
DESCRIPTION
These routines allow you to parse file paths into their directory, filename and suffix.
NOTE: dirname()
and basename()
emulate the behaviours, and quirks,
of the shell and C functions of the same name. See each function’s
documentation for details. If your concern is just parsing paths it is
safer to use :Spec's splitpath()
and splitdir()
methods.
It is guaranteed that
dirname($path) . $path_separator . basename($path);
is equivalent to the original path for all systems but VMS.
- “fileparse”
- my($filename, $dirs, $suffix) = fileparse($path);
my($filename, $dirs, $suffix) = fileparse($path, @suffixes); my
$filename = fileparse($path, @suffixes); The
fileparse()
routine divides a file path into its$dirs
,$filename
and (optionally) the filename$suffix
.$dirs
contains everything up to and including the last directory separator in the$path
including the volume (if applicable). The remainder of the$path
is the$filename
. # On Unix returns (“baz”, “foo/bar”, “”) fileparse(“foo/bar/baz“); # On Windows returns (”baz“, C:\foo\bar\, ”“) fileparse(C:\foo\bar\baz); # On Unix returns (”“, ”/foo/bar/baz”, “”) fileparse(“foo/bar/baz”); If@suffixes
are given each element is a pattern (either a string or aqr//
) matched against the end of the$filename
. The matching portion is removed and becomes the$suffix
. # On Unix returns (“baz”, “foo/bar”, “.txt”) fileparse(“foo/bar/baz.txt“, qr\.[^.]*/); If type is non-Unix (see fileparse_set_fstype) then the pattern matching for suffix removal is performed case-insensitively, since those systems are not case-sensitive when opening existing files. You are guaranteed that$dirs . $filename . $suffix
will denote the same location as the original$path
. - “basename”
- my $filename = basename($path); my $filename =
basename($path, @suffixes); This function is provided for
compatibility with the Unix shell command
basename(1)
. It does NOT always return the file name portion of a path as you might expect. To be safe, if you want the file name portion of a path usefileparse()
.basename()
returns the last level of a filepath even if the last level is clearly directory. In effect, it is acting likepop()
for paths. This differs fromfileparse()
’s behaviour. # Both return “bar” basename(“foo/bar“); basename(”/foo/bar”);@suffixes
work as infileparse()
except all regex metacharacters are quoted. # These two function calls are equivalent. my $filename = basename(“foo/bar/baz.txt“, ”.txt“); my $filename = fileparse(”/foo/bar/baz.txt“, qr\Q.txt\E/); Also note that in order to be compatible with the shell command,basename()
does not strip off a suffix if it is identical to the remaining characters in the filename. - “dirname”
- This function is provided for compatibility with the Unix
shell command
dirname(1)
and has inherited some of its quirks. In spite of its name it does NOT always return the directory name as you might expect. To be safe, if you want the directory name of a path usefileparse()
. Only on VMS (where there is no ambiguity between the file and directory portions of a path) and AmigaOS (possibly due to an implementation quirk in this module) doesdirname()
work likefileparse($path)
, returning just the$dirs
. # On VMS and AmigaOS my $dirs = dirname($path); When using Unix or MSDOS syntax this emulates thedirname(1)
shell function which is subtly different from howfileparse()
works. It returns all but the last level of a file path even if the last level is clearly a directory. In effect, it is not returning the directory portion but simply the path one level up acting likechop()
for file paths. Also unlikefileparse()
,dirname()
does not include a trailing slash on its returned path. # returns foo/bar. fileparse() would return /foo/bar dirname(“foo/bar/baz“); # also returns /foo/bar despite the fact that baz is clearly a # directory. fileparse() would return /foo/bar/baz dirname(”foo/bar/baz“); # returns .. fileparse() would return foo/ dirname(”foo/“); Under VMS, if there is no directory information in the$path
, then the current default device and directory is used. - “fileparse_set_fstype”
- my $type = fileparse_set_fstype(); my
$previous_type = fileparse_set_fstype($type); Normally :Basename
will assume a file path type native to your current operating system
(ie. /foo/bar style on Unix, \foo\bar on Windows, etc…). With this
function you can override that assumption. Valid
$types
are MacOS, VMS, AmigaOS, OS2, RISCOS, MSWin32, DOS (also MSDOS for backwards bug compatibility), Epoc and Unix (all case-insensitive). If an unrecognized$type
is given Unix will be assumed. If you’ve selected VMS syntax, and the file specification you pass to one of these routines contains a /, they assume you are using Unix emulation and apply the Unix syntax rules instead, for that function call only.
SEE ALSO
dirname (1), basename (1), :Spec