filepath: Library for manipulating FilePaths in a cross platform way.

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A library for FilePath manipulations, using Posix or Windows filepaths depending on the platform.

Both System.FilePath.Posix and System.FilePath.Windows provide the same interface. See either for examples and a list of the available functions.


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Versions [RSS] 1.0, 1.1.0.0, 1.1.0.1, 1.1.0.2, 1.1.0.3, 1.1.0.4, 1.2.0.0, 1.2.0.1, 1.3.0.0, 1.3.0.1, 1.3.0.2, 1.4.0.0, 1.4.1.0, 1.4.1.1, 1.4.1.2, 1.4.2, 1.4.2.1, 1.4.2.2, 1.4.100.0, 1.4.100.1, 1.4.100.2, 1.4.100.3, 1.4.100.4, 1.4.101.0, 1.4.200.0, 1.4.200.1, 1.4.300.1, 1.4.300.2, 1.5.0.0, 1.5.2.0, 1.5.3.0 (info)
Change log changelog.md
Dependencies base (>=4 && <4.8) [details]
Tested with ghc ==7.6.3, ghc ==7.6.2, ghc ==7.6.1, ghc ==7.4.2, ghc ==7.4.1, ghc ==7.2.2, ghc ==7.2.1, ghc ==7.0.4, ghc ==7.0.3, ghc ==7.0.2, ghc ==7.0.1, ghc ==6.12.3
License BSD-3-Clause
Author Neil Mitchell
Maintainer libraries@haskell.org
Revised Revision 2 made by HerbertValerioRiedel at 2015-01-12T09:18:07Z
Category System
Home page http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/~ndm/filepath/
Bug tracker https://github.com/haskell/filepath/issues
Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/haskell/filepath.git
this: git clone http://git.haskell.org/packages/filepath.git(tag filepath-1.3.0.2-release)
Uploaded by HerbertValerioRiedel at 2014-03-21T21:18:09Z
Distributions Arch:1.4.2.2, Fedora:1.4.2.2
Reverse Dependencies 1771 direct, 13123 indirect [details]
Downloads 66116 total (719 in the last 30 days)
Rating 2.25 (votes: 2) [estimated by Bayesian average]
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Status Docs available [build log]
Successful builds reported [all 1 reports]

Readme for filepath-1.3.0.2

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System.FilePath Build Status

I have written a System.FilePath module in part based on the one in Yhc, and in part based on the one in Cabal (thanks to Lemmih). The aim is to try and get this module into the base package, as FilePaths are something many programs use, but its all too easy to hack up a little function that gets it right most of the time on most platforms, and there lies a source of bugs.

This module is Posix (Linux) and Windows capable - just import System.FilePath and it will pick the right one. Of course, if you demand Windows paths on all OSes, then System.FilePath.Windows will give you that (same with Posix). Written in Haskell 98 with Hierarchical Modules.

If you go to the Haddock page, there are a few little examples at the top of the re-exported module.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Marc Webber, shapr, David House, Lemmih, others...

Competitors

System.FilePath from Cabal, by Lemmih FilePath.hs and NameManip.hs from MissingH

The one from Cabal and FilePath.hs in MissingH are both very similar, I stole lots of good ideas from those two.

NameManip.hs seems to be more unix specific, but all functions in that module have equivalents in this new System.FilePath module.

Hopefully this new module can be used without noticing any lost functions, and certainly adds new features/functions to the table.

Should FilePath be an abstract data type?

The answer for this library is no. This is a deliberate design decision.

In Haskell 98 the definition is type FilePath = String, and all functions operating on FilePaths, i.e. readFile/writeFile etc take FilePaths. The only way to introduce an abstract type is to provide wrappers for these functions or casts between Strings and FilePathAbstracts.

There are also additional questions as to what constitutes a FilePath, and what is just a pure String. For example, "/path/file.ext" is a FilePath. Is "/" ? "/path" ? "path" ? "file.ext" ? ".ext" ? "file" ?

With that being accepted, it should be trivial to write System.FilePath.ByteString which has the same interface as System.FilePath yet operates on ByteStrings.