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Expansion of a file name means converting a relative file name to an absolute one. Since this is done relative to a default directory, you must specify the default directory name as well as the file name to be expanded. Expansion also simplifies file names by eliminating redundancies such as ./ and name/../.
This function converts filename to an absolute file name. If
directory is supplied, it is the directory to start with if
filename is relative. (The value of directory should itself
be an absolute directory name; it may start with ‘~’.)
Otherwise, the current buffer’s value of default-directory
is
used. For example:
(expand-file-name "foo") ⇒ "/xcssun/users/rms/lewis/foo"
(expand-file-name "../foo") ⇒ "/xcssun/users/rms/foo"
(expand-file-name "foo" "/usr/spool/") ⇒ "/usr/spool/foo"
(expand-file-name "$HOME/foo") ⇒ "/xcssun/users/rms/lewis/$HOME/foo"
Filenames containing ‘.’ or ‘..’ are simplified to their canonical form:
(expand-file-name "bar/../foo") ⇒ "/xcssun/users/rms/lewis/foo"
‘~/’ at the beginning is expanded into the user’s home directory. A ‘/’ or ‘~’ following a ‘/’.
Note that expand-file-name
does not expand environment
variables; only substitute-in-file-name
does that.
This function does the inverse of expansion—it tries to return a relative name that is equivalent to filename when interpreted relative to directory.
If directory is nil
or omitted, the value of
default-directory
is used.
(file-relative-name "/foo/bar" "/foo/") ⇒ "bar") (file-relative-name "/foo/bar" "/hack/") ⇒ "../foo/bar")
The value of this buffer-local variable is the default directory for the current buffer. It should be an absolute directory name; it may start with ‘~’. This variable is local in every buffer.
expand-file-name
uses the default directory when its second
argument is nil
.
On Unix systems, the value is always a string ending with a slash.
default-directory ⇒ "/user/lewis/manual/"
This function replaces environment variable references in filename with the environment variable values. Following standard Unix shell syntax, ‘$’ is the prefix to substitute an environment variable value.
The environment variable name is the series of alphanumeric characters (including underscores) that follow the ‘$’. If the character following the ‘$’ is a ‘{’, then the variable name is everything up to the matching ‘}’.
Here we assume that the environment variable HOME
, which holds
the user’s home directory name, has value ‘/xcssun/users/rms’.
(substitute-in-file-name "$HOME/foo") ⇒ "/xcssun/users/rms/foo"
After substitution, a ‘/’ or ‘~’ following a ‘/’ is taken to be the start of an absolute file name that overrides what precedes it, so everything before that ‘/’ or ‘~’ is deleted. For example:
(substitute-in-file-name "bar/~/foo") ⇒ "~/foo"
(substitute-in-file-name "/usr/local/$HOME/foo") ⇒ "/xcssun/users/rms/foo"
Next: Unique File Names, Previous: Relative File Names, Up: File Names [Contents][Index]