6.8 KiB
Executable File
paths.basename
paths.basename(p)
Returns the basename (i.e., the file portion) of a path.
Note that if p
ends with a slash, this function returns an empty string.
This matches the behavior of Python's os.path.basename
, but differs from
the Unix basename
command (which would return the path segment preceding
the final slash).
Parameters
p |
required.
The path whose basename should be returned. |
paths.dirname
paths.dirname(p)
Returns the dirname of a path.
The dirname is the portion of p
up to but not including the file portion
(i.e., the basename). Any slashes immediately preceding the basename are not
included, unless omitting them would make the dirname empty.
Parameters
p |
required.
The path whose dirname should be returned. |
paths.is_absolute
paths.is_absolute(path)
Returns True
if path
is an absolute path.
Parameters
path |
required.
A path (which is a string). |
paths.join
paths.join(path, others)
Joins one or more path components intelligently.
This function mimics the behavior of Python's os.path.join
function on POSIX
platform. It returns the concatenation of path
and any members of others
,
inserting directory separators before each component except the first. The
separator is not inserted if the path up until that point is either empty or
already ends in a separator.
If any component is an absolute path, all previous components are discarded.
Parameters
path |
required.
A path segment. |
others |
optional.
Additional path segments. |
paths.normalize
paths.normalize(path)
Normalizes a path, eliminating double slashes and other redundant segments.
This function mimics the behavior of Python's os.path.normpath
function on
POSIX platforms; specifically:
- If the entire path is empty, "." is returned.
- All "." segments are removed, unless the path consists solely of a single "." segment.
- Trailing slashes are removed, unless the path consists solely of slashes.
- ".." segments are removed as long as there are corresponding segments earlier in the path to remove; otherwise, they are retained as leading ".." segments.
- Single and double leading slashes are preserved, but three or more leading slashes are collapsed into a single leading slash.
- Multiple adjacent internal slashes are collapsed into a single slash.
Parameters
path |
required.
A path. |
paths.relativize
paths.relativize(path, start)
Returns the portion of path
that is relative to start
.
Because we do not have access to the underlying file system, this
implementation differs slightly from Python's os.path.relpath
in that it
will fail if path
is not beneath start
(rather than use parent segments to
walk up to the common file system root).
Relativizing paths that start with parent directory references only works if the path both start with the same initial parent references.
Parameters
path |
required.
The path to relativize. |
start |
required.
The ancestor path against which to relativize. |
paths.replace_extension
paths.replace_extension(p, new_extension)
Replaces the extension of the file at the end of a path.
If the path has no extension, the new extension is added to it.
Parameters
p |
required.
The path whose extension should be replaced. |
new_extension |
required.
The new extension for the file. The new extension should begin with a dot if you want the new filename to have one. |
paths.split_extension
paths.split_extension(p)
Splits the path p
into a tuple containing the root and extension.
Leading periods on the basename are ignored, so
path.split_extension(".bashrc")
returns (".bashrc", "")
.
Parameters
p |
required.
The path whose root and extension should be split. |