File::BasenameSection: Perl Programmers Reference Guide (3pm)Updated: 2001-09-21 |
File::BasenameSection: Perl Programmers Reference Guide (3pm)Updated: 2001-09-21 |
basename - extract just the filename from a path
dirname - extract just the directory from a path
use File::Basename;
($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist);
$name = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist);
fileparse_set_fstype($os_string);
$basename = basename($fullname,@suffixlist);
$dirname = dirname($fullname);
($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse("lib/File/Basename.pm",qr{\.pm});
fileparse_set_fstype("VMS");
$basename = basename("lib/File/Basename.pm",".pm");
$dirname = dirname("lib/File/Basename.pm");
If the argument passed to it contains one of the substrings ``VMS'', ``MSDOS'', ``MacOS'', ``AmigaOS'' or ``MSWin32'', the file specification syntax of that operating system is used in future calls to fileparse(), basename(), and dirname(). If it contains none of these substrings, Unix syntax is used. This pattern matching is case-insensitive. 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.
If the argument passed to it contains one of the substrings ``VMS'', ``MSDOS'', ``MacOS'', ``AmigaOS'', ``os2'', ``MSWin32'' or ``RISCOS'', then the pattern matching for suffix removal is performed without regard for case, since those systems are not case-sensitive when opening existing files (though some of them preserve case on file creation).
If you haven't called fileparse_set_fstype(), the syntax is chosen by examining the builtin variable $^O according to these rules.
You are guaranteed that if you concatenate path, name, and suffix together in that order, the result will denote the same file as the input file specification.
In scalar context, fileparse() returns only the name part of the filename.
($base,$path,$type) = fileparse('/virgil/aeneid/draft.book7',
qr{\.book\d+});
would yield
$base eq 'draft'
$path eq '/virgil/aeneid/',
$type eq '.book7'
Similarly, using VMS syntax:
($name,$dir,$type) = fileparse('Doc_Root:[Help]Rhetoric.Rnh',
qr{\..*});
would yield
$name eq 'Rhetoric'
$dir eq 'Doc_Root:[Help]'
$type eq '.Rnh'