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1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
2 | // Name: filename.h | |
3 | // Purpose: interface of wxFileName | |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team | |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows licence | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | ||
10 | /** | |
11 | The various values for the path format: this mainly affects the path | |
12 | separator but also whether or not the path has the drive part | |
13 | (as under Windows). | |
14 | ||
15 | See wxFileName for more info. | |
16 | */ | |
17 | enum wxPathFormat | |
18 | { | |
19 | wxPATH_NATIVE = 0, //!< the path format for the current platform. | |
20 | wxPATH_UNIX, | |
21 | wxPATH_BEOS = wxPATH_UNIX, | |
22 | wxPATH_MAC, | |
23 | wxPATH_DOS, | |
24 | wxPATH_WIN = wxPATH_DOS, | |
25 | wxPATH_OS2 = wxPATH_DOS, | |
26 | wxPATH_VMS, | |
27 | ||
28 | wxPATH_MAX //!< Not a valid value for specifying path format | |
29 | }; | |
30 | ||
31 | /** | |
32 | Different conventions for human readable sizes. | |
33 | ||
34 | @see wxFileName::GetHumanReadableSize(). | |
35 | ||
36 | @since 2.9.1 | |
37 | */ | |
38 | enum wxSizeConvention | |
39 | { | |
40 | /// 1024 bytes = 1KB. | |
41 | wxSIZE_CONV_TRADITIONAL, | |
42 | ||
43 | /// 1024 bytes = 1KiB. | |
44 | wxSIZE_CONV_IEC, | |
45 | ||
46 | /// 1000 bytes = 1KB. | |
47 | wxSIZE_CONV_SI | |
48 | }; | |
49 | ||
50 | ||
51 | /** | |
52 | The kind of normalization to do with the file name: these values can be | |
53 | or'd together to perform several operations at once. | |
54 | See wxFileName::Normalize() for more info. | |
55 | */ | |
56 | enum wxPathNormalize | |
57 | { | |
58 | //! Replace environment variables with their values. | |
59 | //! wxFileName understands both Unix and Windows (but only under Windows) environment | |
60 | //! variables expansion: i.e. @c "$var", @c "$(var)" and @c "${var}" are always understood | |
61 | //! and in addition under Windows @c "%var%" is also. | |
62 | wxPATH_NORM_ENV_VARS = 0x0001, | |
63 | ||
64 | wxPATH_NORM_DOTS = 0x0002, //!< Squeeze all @c ".." and @c ".". | |
65 | wxPATH_NORM_TILDE = 0x0004, //!< Replace @c "~" and @c "~user" (Unix only). | |
66 | wxPATH_NORM_CASE = 0x0008, //!< If the platform is case insensitive, make lowercase the path. | |
67 | wxPATH_NORM_ABSOLUTE = 0x0010, //!< Make the path absolute. | |
68 | wxPATH_NORM_LONG = 0x0020, //!< Expand the path to the "long" form (Windows only). | |
69 | wxPATH_NORM_SHORTCUT = 0x0040, //!< Resolve the shortcut, if it is a shortcut (Windows only). | |
70 | ||
71 | //! A value indicating all normalization flags except for @c wxPATH_NORM_CASE. | |
72 | wxPATH_NORM_ALL = 0x00ff & ~wxPATH_NORM_CASE | |
73 | }; | |
74 | ||
75 | /** | |
76 | Flags for wxFileName::Rmdir(). | |
77 | */ | |
78 | enum | |
79 | { | |
80 | /// Delete the specified directory and its subdirectories if they are empty. | |
81 | wxPATH_RMDIR_FULL = 1, | |
82 | ||
83 | /** | |
84 | Delete the specified directory and all the files and subdirectories in it | |
85 | recursively. | |
86 | ||
87 | This flag is obviously @b dangerous and should be used with care and | |
88 | after asking the user for confirmation. | |
89 | */ | |
90 | wxPATH_RMDIR_RECURSIVE = 2 | |
91 | }; | |
92 | ||
93 | /** | |
94 | Flags for wxFileName::Exists(). | |
95 | ||
96 | @since 2.9.5 | |
97 | */ | |
98 | enum | |
99 | { | |
100 | wxFILE_EXISTS_REGULAR = 0x0001, //!< Check for existence of a regular file | |
101 | wxFILE_EXISTS_DIR = 0x0002, //!< Check for existence of a directory | |
102 | /** | |
103 | Check for existence of a symlink. | |
104 | ||
105 | Notice that this flag also sets ::wxFILE_EXISTS_NO_FOLLOW, otherwise it | |
106 | would never be satisfied as wxFileName::Exists() would be checking for | |
107 | the existence of the symlink target and not the symlink itself. | |
108 | */ | |
109 | wxFILE_EXISTS_SYMLINK = 0x1004, | |
110 | wxFILE_EXISTS_DEVICE = 0x0008, //!< Check for existence of a device | |
111 | wxFILE_EXISTS_FIFO = 0x0016, //!< Check for existence of a FIFO | |
112 | wxFILE_EXISTS_SOCKET = 0x0032, //!< Check for existence of a socket | |
113 | wxFILE_EXISTS_NO_FOLLOW = 0x1000 //!< Don't dereference a contained symbolic link | |
114 | wxFILE_EXISTS_ANY = 0x1FFF, //!< Check for existence of anything | |
115 | }; | |
116 | ||
117 | /** | |
118 | The return value of wxFileName::GetSize() in case of error. | |
119 | */ | |
120 | wxULongLong wxInvalidSize; | |
121 | ||
122 | ||
123 | /** | |
124 | @class wxFileName | |
125 | ||
126 | wxFileName encapsulates a file name. | |
127 | ||
128 | This class serves two purposes: first, it provides the functions to split the | |
129 | file names into components and to recombine these components in the full file | |
130 | name which can then be passed to the OS file functions | |
131 | (and @ref group_funcmacro_file "wxWidgets functions" wrapping them). | |
132 | Second, it includes the functions for working with the files itself. Note that | |
133 | to change the file data you should use wxFile class instead. | |
134 | wxFileName provides functions for working with the file attributes. | |
135 | ||
136 | When working with directory names (i.e. without filename and extension) | |
137 | make sure not to misuse the file name part of this class with the last | |
138 | directory. Instead initialize the wxFileName instance like this: | |
139 | ||
140 | @code | |
141 | wxFileName dirname( "C:\mydir", "" ); | |
142 | MyMethod( dirname.GetPath() ); | |
143 | @endcode | |
144 | ||
145 | The same can be done using the static method wxFileName::DirName(): | |
146 | ||
147 | @code | |
148 | wxFileName dirname = wxFileName::DirName( "C:\mydir" ); | |
149 | MyMethod( dirname.GetPath() ); | |
150 | @endcode | |
151 | ||
152 | Accordingly, methods dealing with directories or directory names like | |
153 | wxFileName::IsDirReadable() use wxFileName::GetPath() whereas methods dealing | |
154 | with file names like wxFileName::IsFileReadable() use wxFileName::GetFullPath(). | |
155 | ||
156 | If it is not known whether a string contains a directory name or a complete | |
157 | file name (such as when interpreting user input) you need to use the static | |
158 | function wxFileName::DirExists() (or its identical variants wxDir::Exists() and | |
159 | wxDirExists()) and construct the wxFileName instance accordingly. | |
160 | This will only work if the directory actually exists, of course: | |
161 | ||
162 | @code | |
163 | wxString user_input; | |
164 | // get input from user | |
165 | ||
166 | wxFileName fname; | |
167 | if (wxDirExists(user_input)) | |
168 | fname.AssignDir( user_input ); | |
169 | else | |
170 | fname.Assign( user_input ); | |
171 | @endcode | |
172 | ||
173 | Please note that many wxFileName methods accept the path format argument | |
174 | which is by @c wxPATH_NATIVE by default meaning to use the path format | |
175 | native for the current platform. | |
176 | The path format affects the operation of wxFileName functions in several ways: | |
177 | first and foremost, it defines the path separator character to use, but it | |
178 | also affects other things such as whether the path has the drive part or not. | |
179 | See wxPathFormat for more info. | |
180 | ||
181 | ||
182 | @section filename_format File name format | |
183 | ||
184 | wxFileName currently supports the file names in the Unix, DOS/Windows, | |
185 | Mac OS and VMS formats. Although these formats are quite different, | |
186 | wxFileName tries to treat them all in the same generic way. | |
187 | It supposes that all file names consist of the following parts: the volume | |
188 | (also known as drive under Windows or device under VMS), the path which is | |
189 | a sequence of directory names separated by the path separators and the full | |
190 | filename itself which, in turn, is composed from the base file name and the | |
191 | extension. All of the individual components of the file name may be empty | |
192 | and, for example, the volume name is always empty under Unix, but if they | |
193 | are all empty simultaneously, the filename object is considered to be in an | |
194 | invalid state and wxFileName::IsOk() returns false for it. | |
195 | ||
196 | File names can be case-sensitive or not, the function wxFileName::IsCaseSensitive() | |
197 | allows to determine this. The rules for determining whether the file name is | |
198 | absolute or relative also depend on the file name format and the only portable way | |
199 | to answer this question is to use wxFileName::IsAbsolute() or wxFileName::IsRelative() | |
200 | method. | |
201 | ||
202 | Note that on Windows,"X:" refers to the current working directory on drive X. | |
203 | Therefore, a wxFileName instance constructed from for example "X:dir/file.ext" | |
204 | treats the portion beyond drive separator as being relative to that directory. | |
205 | To ensure that the filename is absolute, you may use wxFileName::MakeAbsolute(). | |
206 | There is also an inverse function wxFileName::MakeRelativeTo() which undoes | |
207 | what wxFileName::Normalize(wxPATH_NORM_DOTS) does. | |
208 | Other functions returning information about the file format provided by this | |
209 | class are wxFileName::GetVolumeSeparator(), wxFileName::IsPathSeparator(). | |
210 | ||
211 | ||
212 | @section filename_construction File name construction | |
213 | ||
214 | You can initialize a wxFileName instance using one of the following functions: | |
215 | ||
216 | @li wxFileName::wxFileName() | |
217 | @li wxFileName::Assign() | |
218 | @li wxFileName::AssignCwd() | |
219 | @li wxFileName::AssignDir() | |
220 | @li wxFileName::AssignHomeDir() | |
221 | @li wxFileName::AssignTempFileName() | |
222 | @li wxFileName::DirName() | |
223 | @li wxFileName::FileName() | |
224 | @li wxFileName::operator=() | |
225 | ||
226 | ||
227 | @section filename_tests File name tests | |
228 | ||
229 | Before doing other tests, you should use wxFileName::IsOk() to verify that | |
230 | the filename is well defined. If it is, FileExists() can be used to test whether | |
231 | a file with such name exists and wxFileName::DirExists() can be used to test | |
232 | for directory existence. | |
233 | File names should be compared using the wxFileName::SameAs() method or | |
234 | wxFileName::operator==(). For testing basic access modes, you can use: | |
235 | ||
236 | @li wxFileName::IsDirWritable() | |
237 | @li wxFileName::IsDirReadable() | |
238 | @li wxFileName::IsFileWritable() | |
239 | @li wxFileName::IsFileReadable() | |
240 | @li wxFileName::IsFileExecutable() | |
241 | ||
242 | ||
243 | @section filename_components File name components | |
244 | ||
245 | These functions allow to examine and modify the individual directories | |
246 | of the path: | |
247 | ||
248 | @li wxFileName::AppendDir() | |
249 | @li wxFileName::InsertDir() | |
250 | @li wxFileName::GetDirCount() | |
251 | @li wxFileName::PrependDir() | |
252 | @li wxFileName::RemoveDir() | |
253 | @li wxFileName::RemoveLastDir() | |
254 | ||
255 | To change the components of the file name individually you can use the | |
256 | following functions: | |
257 | ||
258 | @li wxFileName::GetExt() | |
259 | @li wxFileName::GetName() | |
260 | @li wxFileName::GetVolume() | |
261 | @li wxFileName::HasExt() | |
262 | @li wxFileName::HasName() | |
263 | @li wxFileName::HasVolume() | |
264 | @li wxFileName::SetExt() | |
265 | @li wxFileName::ClearExt() | |
266 | @li wxFileName::SetEmptyExt() | |
267 | @li wxFileName::SetName() | |
268 | @li wxFileName::SetVolume() | |
269 | ||
270 | You can initialize a wxFileName instance using one of the following functions: | |
271 | ||
272 | ||
273 | @section filename_operations File name operations | |
274 | ||
275 | These methods allow to work with the file creation, access and modification | |
276 | times. Note that not all filesystems under all platforms implement these times | |
277 | in the same way. For example, the access time under Windows has a resolution of | |
278 | one day (so it is really the access date and not time). The access time may be | |
279 | updated when the file is executed or not depending on the platform. | |
280 | ||
281 | @li wxFileName::GetModificationTime() | |
282 | @li wxFileName::GetTimes() | |
283 | @li wxFileName::SetTimes() | |
284 | @li wxFileName::Touch() | |
285 | ||
286 | Other file system operations functions are: | |
287 | ||
288 | @li wxFileName::Mkdir() | |
289 | @li wxFileName::Rmdir() | |
290 | ||
291 | ||
292 | @library{wxbase} | |
293 | @category{file} | |
294 | */ | |
295 | class wxFileName | |
296 | { | |
297 | public: | |
298 | /** | |
299 | Default constructor. | |
300 | */ | |
301 | wxFileName(); | |
302 | ||
303 | /** | |
304 | Copy constructor. | |
305 | */ | |
306 | wxFileName(const wxFileName& filename); | |
307 | ||
308 | /** | |
309 | Constructor taking a full filename. | |
310 | ||
311 | If it terminates with a '/', a directory path is constructed | |
312 | (the name will be empty), otherwise a file name and extension | |
313 | are extracted from it. | |
314 | */ | |
315 | wxFileName(const wxString& fullpath, | |
316 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
317 | ||
318 | /** | |
319 | Constructor a directory name and file name. | |
320 | */ | |
321 | wxFileName(const wxString& path, const wxString& name, | |
322 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
323 | ||
324 | /** | |
325 | Constructor from a directory name, base file name and extension. | |
326 | */ | |
327 | wxFileName(const wxString& path, const wxString& name, | |
328 | const wxString& ext, | |
329 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
330 | ||
331 | /** | |
332 | Constructor from a volume name, a directory name, base file name and extension. | |
333 | */ | |
334 | wxFileName(const wxString& volume, const wxString& path, | |
335 | const wxString& name, | |
336 | const wxString& ext, | |
337 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
338 | ||
339 | /** | |
340 | Appends a directory component to the path. This component should contain a | |
341 | single directory name level, i.e. not contain any path or volume separators nor | |
342 | should it be empty, otherwise the function does nothing (and generates an | |
343 | assert failure in debug build). | |
344 | */ | |
345 | void AppendDir(const wxString& dir); | |
346 | ||
347 | /** | |
348 | Creates the file name from another filename object. | |
349 | */ | |
350 | void Assign(const wxFileName& filepath); | |
351 | ||
352 | /** | |
353 | Creates the file name from a full file name with a path. | |
354 | */ | |
355 | void Assign(const wxString& fullpath, | |
356 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
357 | ||
358 | /** | |
359 | Creates the file name from volume, path, name and extension. | |
360 | */ | |
361 | void Assign(const wxString& volume, const wxString& path, | |
362 | const wxString& name, | |
363 | const wxString& ext, | |
364 | bool hasExt, | |
365 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
366 | ||
367 | /** | |
368 | Creates the file name from volume, path, name and extension. | |
369 | */ | |
370 | void Assign(const wxString& volume, const wxString& path, | |
371 | const wxString& name, | |
372 | const wxString& ext, | |
373 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
374 | ||
375 | /** | |
376 | Creates the file name from file path and file name. | |
377 | */ | |
378 | void Assign(const wxString& path, const wxString& name, | |
379 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
380 | ||
381 | /** | |
382 | Creates the file name from path, name and extension. | |
383 | */ | |
384 | void Assign(const wxString& path, const wxString& name, | |
385 | const wxString& ext, | |
386 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
387 | ||
388 | /** | |
389 | Makes this object refer to the current working directory on the specified | |
390 | volume (or current volume if @a volume is empty). | |
391 | ||
392 | @see GetCwd() | |
393 | */ | |
394 | void AssignCwd(const wxString& volume = wxEmptyString); | |
395 | ||
396 | /** | |
397 | Sets this file name object to the given directory name. | |
398 | The name and extension will be empty. | |
399 | */ | |
400 | void AssignDir(const wxString& dir, | |
401 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
402 | ||
403 | /** | |
404 | Sets this file name object to the home directory. | |
405 | */ | |
406 | void AssignHomeDir(); | |
407 | ||
408 | /** | |
409 | The function calls CreateTempFileName() to create a temporary file | |
410 | and sets this object to the name of the file. | |
411 | ||
412 | If a temporary file couldn't be created, the object is put into | |
413 | an invalid state (see IsOk()). | |
414 | */ | |
415 | void AssignTempFileName(const wxString& prefix); | |
416 | ||
417 | /** | |
418 | The function calls CreateTempFileName() to create a temporary | |
419 | file name and open @a fileTemp with it. | |
420 | ||
421 | If the file couldn't be opened, the object is put into | |
422 | an invalid state (see IsOk()). | |
423 | */ | |
424 | void AssignTempFileName(const wxString& prefix, wxFile* fileTemp); | |
425 | ||
426 | /** | |
427 | The function calls CreateTempFileName() to create a temporary | |
428 | file name and open @a fileTemp with it. | |
429 | ||
430 | If the file couldn't be opened, the object is put into | |
431 | an invalid state (see IsOk()). | |
432 | */ | |
433 | void AssignTempFileName(const wxString& prefix, wxFFile* fileTemp); | |
434 | ||
435 | /** | |
436 | Reset all components to default, uninitialized state. | |
437 | */ | |
438 | void Clear(); | |
439 | ||
440 | /** | |
441 | Removes the extension from the file name resulting in a | |
442 | file name with no trailing dot. | |
443 | ||
444 | @see SetExt(), SetEmptyExt() | |
445 | */ | |
446 | void ClearExt(); | |
447 | ||
448 | ||
449 | /** | |
450 | Returns a temporary file name starting with the given @e prefix. | |
451 | If @a prefix is an absolute path and ends in a separator, the | |
452 | temporary file is created in this directory; if it is an absolute | |
453 | filepath or there is no separator, the temporary file is created in its | |
454 | path, with the 'name' segment prepended to the temporary filename; | |
455 | otherwise it is created in the default system directory for temporary | |
456 | files or in the current directory. | |
457 | ||
458 | If the function succeeds, the temporary file is actually created. | |
459 | If @a fileTemp is not @NULL, this wxFile will be opened using the name of | |
460 | the temporary file. Where possible this is done in an atomic way to ensure that | |
461 | no race condition occurs between creating the temporary file name and opening | |
462 | it, which might lead to a security compromise on multiuser systems. | |
463 | If @a fileTemp is @NULL, the file is created but not opened. | |
464 | Under Unix, the temporary file will have read and write permissions for the | |
465 | owner only, to minimize security problems. | |
466 | ||
467 | @param prefix | |
468 | Location to use for the temporary file name construction. If @a prefix | |
469 | is a directory it must have a terminal separator | |
470 | @param fileTemp | |
471 | The file to open, or @NULL just to get the name | |
472 | ||
473 | @return The full temporary filepath, or an empty string on error. | |
474 | */ | |
475 | static wxString CreateTempFileName(const wxString& prefix, | |
476 | wxFile* fileTemp = NULL); | |
477 | ||
478 | /** | |
479 | This is the same as CreateTempFileName(const wxString &prefix, wxFile *fileTemp) | |
480 | but takes a wxFFile parameter instead of wxFile. | |
481 | */ | |
482 | static wxString CreateTempFileName(const wxString& prefix, | |
483 | wxFFile* fileTemp = NULL); | |
484 | ||
485 | ||
486 | /** | |
487 | Returns @true if the directory with this name exists. | |
488 | ||
489 | Notice that this function tests the directory part of this object, | |
490 | i.e. the string returned by GetPath(), and not the full path returned | |
491 | by GetFullPath(). | |
492 | ||
493 | @see FileExists(), Exists() | |
494 | */ | |
495 | bool DirExists() const; | |
496 | ||
497 | /** | |
498 | Returns @true if the directory with name @a dir exists. | |
499 | ||
500 | @see FileExists(), Exists() | |
501 | */ | |
502 | static bool DirExists(const wxString& dir); | |
503 | ||
504 | /** | |
505 | Returns the object corresponding to the directory with the given name. | |
506 | The @a dir parameter may have trailing path separator or not. | |
507 | */ | |
508 | static wxFileName DirName(const wxString& dir, | |
509 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
510 | ||
511 | /** | |
512 | Turns off symlink dereferencing. | |
513 | ||
514 | By default, all operations in this class work on the target of a | |
515 | symbolic link (symlink) if the path of the file is actually a symlink. | |
516 | Using this method allows to turn off this "symlink following" behaviour | |
517 | and apply the operations to this path itself, even if it is a symlink. | |
518 | ||
519 | The following methods are currently affected by this option: | |
520 | - GetTimes() (but not SetTimes() as there is no portable way to | |
521 | change the time of symlink itself). | |
522 | - Existence checks: FileExists(), DirExists() and Exists() (notice | |
523 | that static versions of these methods always follow symlinks). | |
524 | - IsSameAs(). | |
525 | ||
526 | @see ShouldFollowLink() | |
527 | ||
528 | @since 2.9.5 | |
529 | */ | |
530 | void DontFollowLink(); | |
531 | ||
532 | /** | |
533 | Calls the static overload of this function with the full path of this | |
534 | object. | |
535 | ||
536 | @since 2.9.4 (@a flags is new since 2.9.5) | |
537 | */ | |
538 | bool Exists(int flags = wxFILE_EXISTS_ANY) const; | |
539 | ||
540 | /** | |
541 | Returns @true if either a file or a directory or something else with | |
542 | this name exists in the file system. | |
543 | ||
544 | Don't dereference @a path if it is a symbolic link and @a flags | |
545 | argument contains ::wxFILE_EXISTS_NO_FOLLOW. | |
546 | ||
547 | This method is equivalent to @code FileExists() || DirExists() @endcode | |
548 | under Windows, but under Unix it also returns true if the file | |
549 | identifies a special file system object such as a device, a socket or a | |
550 | FIFO. | |
551 | ||
552 | Alternatively you may check for the existence of a file system entry of | |
553 | a specific type by passing the appropriate @a flags (this parameter is | |
554 | new since wxWidgets 2.9.5). E.g. to test for a symbolic link existence | |
555 | you could use ::wxFILE_EXISTS_SYMLINK. | |
556 | ||
557 | @since 2.9.4 | |
558 | ||
559 | @see FileExists(), DirExists() | |
560 | */ | |
561 | static bool Exists(const wxString& path, int flags = wxFILE_EXISTS_ANY); | |
562 | ||
563 | /** | |
564 | Returns @true if the file with this name exists. | |
565 | ||
566 | @see DirExists(), Exists() | |
567 | */ | |
568 | bool FileExists() const; | |
569 | ||
570 | /** | |
571 | Returns @true if the file with name @a file exists. | |
572 | ||
573 | @see DirExists(), Exists() | |
574 | */ | |
575 | static bool FileExists(const wxString& file); | |
576 | ||
577 | /** | |
578 | Returns the file name object corresponding to the given @e file. This | |
579 | function exists mainly for symmetry with DirName(). | |
580 | */ | |
581 | static wxFileName FileName(const wxString& file, | |
582 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
583 | ||
584 | /** | |
585 | Retrieves the value of the current working directory on the specified volume. | |
586 | If the volume is empty, the program's current working directory is returned for | |
587 | the current volume. | |
588 | ||
589 | @return The string containing the current working directory or an empty | |
590 | string on error. | |
591 | ||
592 | @see AssignCwd() | |
593 | */ | |
594 | static wxString GetCwd(const wxString& volume = wxEmptyString); | |
595 | ||
596 | /** | |
597 | Returns the number of directories in the file name. | |
598 | */ | |
599 | size_t GetDirCount() const; | |
600 | ||
601 | /** | |
602 | Returns the directories in string array form. | |
603 | */ | |
604 | const wxArrayString& GetDirs() const; | |
605 | ||
606 | /** | |
607 | Returns the file name extension. | |
608 | */ | |
609 | wxString GetExt() const; | |
610 | ||
611 | /** | |
612 | Returns the characters that can't be used in filenames and directory names | |
613 | for the specified format. | |
614 | */ | |
615 | static wxString GetForbiddenChars(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
616 | ||
617 | /** | |
618 | Returns the canonical path format for this platform. | |
619 | */ | |
620 | static wxPathFormat GetFormat(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
621 | ||
622 | /** | |
623 | Returns the full name (including extension but excluding directories). | |
624 | */ | |
625 | wxString GetFullName() const; | |
626 | ||
627 | /** | |
628 | Returns the full path with name and extension. | |
629 | */ | |
630 | wxString GetFullPath(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE) const; | |
631 | ||
632 | /** | |
633 | Returns the home directory. | |
634 | */ | |
635 | static wxString GetHomeDir(); | |
636 | ||
637 | //@{ | |
638 | /** | |
639 | Returns the representation of the file size in a human-readable form. | |
640 | ||
641 | In the first version, the size of this file is used. In the second one, | |
642 | the specified size @a bytes is used. | |
643 | ||
644 | If the file size could not be retrieved or @a bytes is ::wxInvalidSize | |
645 | or zero, the @c failmsg string is returned. | |
646 | ||
647 | Otherwise the returned string is a floating-point number with @c | |
648 | precision decimal digits followed by the abbreviation of the unit used. | |
649 | By default the traditional, although incorrect, convention of using SI | |
650 | units for multiples of 1024 is used, i.e. returned string will use | |
651 | suffixes of B, KB, MB, GB, TB for bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, | |
652 | gigabytes and terabytes respectively. With the IEC convention the names | |
653 | of the units are changed to B, KiB, MiB, GiB and TiB for bytes, | |
654 | kibibytes, mebibytes, gibibytes and tebibytes. Finally, with SI | |
655 | convention the same B, KB, MB, GB and TB suffixes are used but in their | |
656 | correct SI meaning, i.e. as multiples of 1000 and not 1024. | |
657 | ||
658 | Support for the different size conventions is new in wxWidgets 2.9.1, | |
659 | in previous versions only the traditional convention was implemented. | |
660 | */ | |
661 | wxString | |
662 | GetHumanReadableSize(const wxString& failmsg = _("Not available"), | |
663 | int precision = 1, | |
664 | wxSizeConvention conv = wxSIZE_CONV_TRADITIONAL) const; | |
665 | ||
666 | static wxString | |
667 | GetHumanReadableSize(const wxULongLong& bytes, | |
668 | const wxString& nullsize = _("Not available"), | |
669 | int precision = 1, | |
670 | wxSizeConvention conv = wxSIZE_CONV_TRADITIONAL); | |
671 | //@} | |
672 | ||
673 | /** | |
674 | Return the long form of the path (returns identity on non-Windows platforms). | |
675 | */ | |
676 | wxString GetLongPath() const; | |
677 | ||
678 | /** | |
679 | Returns the last time the file was last modified. | |
680 | */ | |
681 | wxDateTime GetModificationTime() const; | |
682 | ||
683 | /** | |
684 | Returns the name part of the filename (without extension). | |
685 | ||
686 | @see GetFullName() | |
687 | */ | |
688 | wxString GetName() const; | |
689 | ||
690 | /** | |
691 | Returns the path part of the filename (without the name or extension). | |
692 | ||
693 | The possible flags values are: | |
694 | ||
695 | - @b wxPATH_GET_VOLUME: | |
696 | Return the path with the volume (does nothing for the filename formats | |
697 | without volumes), otherwise the path without volume part is returned. | |
698 | ||
699 | - @b wxPATH_GET_SEPARATOR: | |
700 | Return the path with the trailing separator, if this flag is not given | |
701 | there will be no separator at the end of the path. | |
702 | ||
703 | - @b wxPATH_NO_SEPARATOR: | |
704 | Don't include the trailing separator in the returned string. This is | |
705 | the default (the value of this flag is 0) and exists only for symmetry | |
706 | with wxPATH_GET_SEPARATOR. | |
707 | ||
708 | @note If the path is a toplevel one (e.g. @c "/" on Unix or @c "C:\" on | |
709 | Windows), then the returned path will contain trailing separator | |
710 | even with @c wxPATH_NO_SEPARATOR. | |
711 | */ | |
712 | wxString GetPath(int flags = wxPATH_GET_VOLUME, | |
713 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE) const; | |
714 | ||
715 | /** | |
716 | Returns the usually used path separator for this format. | |
717 | For all formats but @c wxPATH_DOS there is only one path separator anyhow, | |
718 | but for DOS there are two of them and the native one, i.e. the backslash | |
719 | is returned by this method. | |
720 | ||
721 | @see GetPathSeparators() | |
722 | */ | |
723 | static wxUniChar GetPathSeparator(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
724 | ||
725 | /** | |
726 | Returns the string containing all the path separators for this format. | |
727 | For all formats but @c wxPATH_DOS this string contains only one character | |
728 | but for DOS and Windows both @c '/' and @c '\' may be used as separators. | |
729 | ||
730 | @see GetPathSeparator() | |
731 | */ | |
732 | static wxString GetPathSeparators(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
733 | ||
734 | /** | |
735 | Returns the string of characters which may terminate the path part. | |
736 | This is the same as GetPathSeparators() except for VMS | |
737 | path format where ] is used at the end of the path part. | |
738 | */ | |
739 | static wxString GetPathTerminators(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
740 | ||
741 | /** | |
742 | Returns the path with the trailing separator, useful for appending the name | |
743 | to the given path. | |
744 | ||
745 | This is the same as calling | |
746 | @code | |
747 | GetPath(wxPATH_GET_VOLUME | wxPATH_GET_SEPARATOR, format) | |
748 | @endcode | |
749 | */ | |
750 | wxString GetPathWithSep(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE) const; | |
751 | ||
752 | /** | |
753 | Return the short form of the path (returns identity on non-Windows platforms). | |
754 | */ | |
755 | wxString GetShortPath() const; | |
756 | ||
757 | /** | |
758 | Returns the size of the file If the file does not exist or its size could | |
759 | not be read (because e.g. the file is locked by another process) the returned | |
760 | value is ::wxInvalidSize. | |
761 | */ | |
762 | wxULongLong GetSize() const; | |
763 | ||
764 | /** | |
765 | Returns the size of the file If the file does not exist or its size could | |
766 | not be read (because e.g. the file is locked by another process) the returned | |
767 | value is ::wxInvalidSize. | |
768 | */ | |
769 | static wxULongLong GetSize(const wxString& filename); | |
770 | ||
771 | /** | |
772 | Returns the directory used for temporary files. | |
773 | */ | |
774 | static wxString GetTempDir(); | |
775 | ||
776 | /** | |
777 | Returns the last access, last modification and creation times. | |
778 | The last access time is updated whenever the file is read or written | |
779 | (or executed in the case of Windows), last modification time is only | |
780 | changed when the file is written to. | |
781 | Finally, the creation time is indeed the time when the file was created | |
782 | under Windows and the inode change time under Unix (as it is impossible to | |
783 | retrieve the real file creation time there anyhow) which can also be changed | |
784 | by many operations after the file creation. | |
785 | ||
786 | If no filename or extension is specified in this instance of wxFileName | |
787 | (and therefore IsDir() returns @true) then this function will return the | |
788 | directory times of the path specified by GetPath(), otherwise the file | |
789 | times of the file specified by GetFullPath(). | |
790 | Any of the pointers may be @NULL if the corresponding time is not needed. | |
791 | ||
792 | @return @true on success, @false if we failed to retrieve the times. | |
793 | */ | |
794 | bool GetTimes(wxDateTime* dtAccess, wxDateTime* dtMod, | |
795 | wxDateTime* dtCreate) const; | |
796 | ||
797 | /** | |
798 | Returns the string containing the volume for this file name, empty if it | |
799 | doesn't have one or if the file system doesn't support volumes at all | |
800 | (for example, Unix). | |
801 | */ | |
802 | wxString GetVolume() const; | |
803 | ||
804 | /** | |
805 | Returns the string separating the volume from the path for this format. | |
806 | */ | |
807 | static wxString GetVolumeSeparator(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
808 | ||
809 | /** | |
810 | This function builds a volume path string, for example "C:\\". | |
811 | ||
812 | Implemented for the platforms which use drive letters, i.e. DOS, MSW | |
813 | and OS/2 only. | |
814 | ||
815 | @since 2.9.0 | |
816 | ||
817 | @param drive | |
818 | The drive letter, 'A' through 'Z' or 'a' through 'z'. | |
819 | ||
820 | @param flags | |
821 | @c wxPATH_NO_SEPARATOR or @c wxPATH_GET_SEPARATOR to omit or include | |
822 | the trailing path separator, the default is to include it. | |
823 | ||
824 | @return Volume path string. | |
825 | */ | |
826 | static wxString GetVolumeString(char drive, int flags = wxPATH_GET_SEPARATOR); | |
827 | ||
828 | /** | |
829 | Returns @true if an extension is present. | |
830 | */ | |
831 | bool HasExt() const; | |
832 | ||
833 | /** | |
834 | Returns @true if a name is present. | |
835 | */ | |
836 | bool HasName() const; | |
837 | ||
838 | /** | |
839 | Returns @true if a volume specifier is present. | |
840 | */ | |
841 | bool HasVolume() const; | |
842 | ||
843 | /** | |
844 | Inserts a directory component before the zero-based position in the directory | |
845 | list. Please see AppendDir() for important notes. | |
846 | */ | |
847 | void InsertDir(size_t before, const wxString& dir); | |
848 | ||
849 | /** | |
850 | Returns @true if this filename is absolute. | |
851 | */ | |
852 | bool IsAbsolute(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE) const; | |
853 | ||
854 | /** | |
855 | Returns @true if the file names of this type are case-sensitive. | |
856 | */ | |
857 | static bool IsCaseSensitive(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
858 | ||
859 | /** | |
860 | Returns @true if this object represents a directory, @false otherwise | |
861 | (i.e. if it is a file). | |
862 | ||
863 | Note that this method doesn't test whether the directory or file really | |
864 | exists, you should use DirExists() or FileExists() for this. | |
865 | */ | |
866 | bool IsDir() const; | |
867 | ||
868 | /** | |
869 | Returns @true if the directory component of this instance is an existing | |
870 | directory and this process has read permissions on it. Read permissions | |
871 | on a directory mean that you can list the directory contents but it | |
872 | doesn't imply that you have read permissions on the files contained. | |
873 | */ | |
874 | bool IsDirReadable() const; | |
875 | ||
876 | /** | |
877 | Returns @true if the given @e dir is an existing directory and this process | |
878 | has read permissions on it. Read permissions on a directory mean that you | |
879 | can list the directory contents but it doesn't imply that you have read | |
880 | permissions on the files contained. | |
881 | */ | |
882 | static bool IsDirReadable(const wxString& dir); | |
883 | ||
884 | /** | |
885 | Returns @true if the directory component of this instance | |
886 | is an existing directory and this process has write permissions on it. | |
887 | Write permissions on a directory mean that you can create new files in the | |
888 | directory. | |
889 | */ | |
890 | bool IsDirWritable() const; | |
891 | ||
892 | /** | |
893 | Returns @true if the given @a dir is an existing directory and this | |
894 | process has write permissions on it. | |
895 | Write permissions on a directory mean that you can create new files in the | |
896 | directory. | |
897 | */ | |
898 | static bool IsDirWritable(const wxString& dir); | |
899 | ||
900 | /** | |
901 | Returns @true if a file with this name exists and if this process has execute | |
902 | permissions on it. | |
903 | */ | |
904 | bool IsFileExecutable() const; | |
905 | ||
906 | /** | |
907 | Returns @true if a file with this name exists and if this process has execute | |
908 | permissions on it. | |
909 | */ | |
910 | static bool IsFileExecutable(const wxString& file); | |
911 | ||
912 | /** | |
913 | Returns @true if a file with this name exists and if this process has read | |
914 | permissions on it. | |
915 | */ | |
916 | bool IsFileReadable() const; | |
917 | ||
918 | /** | |
919 | Returns @true if a file with this name exists and if this process has read | |
920 | permissions on it. | |
921 | */ | |
922 | static bool IsFileReadable(const wxString& file); | |
923 | ||
924 | /** | |
925 | Returns @true if a file with this name exists and if this process has write | |
926 | permissions on it. | |
927 | */ | |
928 | bool IsFileWritable() const; | |
929 | ||
930 | /** | |
931 | Returns @true if a file with this name exists and if this process has write | |
932 | permissions on it. | |
933 | */ | |
934 | static bool IsFileWritable(const wxString& file); | |
935 | ||
936 | /** | |
937 | Returns @true if the filename is valid, @false if it is not initialized yet. | |
938 | The assignment functions and Clear() may reset the object to the uninitialized, | |
939 | invalid state (the former only do it on failure). | |
940 | */ | |
941 | bool IsOk() const; | |
942 | ||
943 | /** | |
944 | Returns @true if the char is a path separator for this format. | |
945 | */ | |
946 | static bool IsPathSeparator(wxChar ch, | |
947 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
948 | ||
949 | /** | |
950 | Returns @true if the volume part of the path is a unique volume name. | |
951 | ||
952 | This function will always return @false if the path format is not | |
953 | wxPATH_DOS. | |
954 | ||
955 | Unique volume names are Windows volume identifiers which remain the same | |
956 | regardless of where the volume is actually mounted. Example of a path | |
957 | using a volume name could be | |
958 | @code | |
959 | \\?\Volume{8089d7d7-d0ac-11db-9dd0-806d6172696f}\Program Files\setup.exe | |
960 | @endcode | |
961 | ||
962 | @since 2.9.1 | |
963 | */ | |
964 | static bool IsMSWUniqueVolumeNamePath(const wxString& path, | |
965 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
966 | ||
967 | /** | |
968 | Returns @true if this filename is not absolute. | |
969 | */ | |
970 | bool IsRelative(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE) const; | |
971 | ||
972 | /** | |
973 | On Mac OS, gets the common type and creator for the given extension. | |
974 | ||
975 | @onlyfor{wxosx} | |
976 | */ | |
977 | static bool MacFindDefaultTypeAndCreator(const wxString& ext, | |
978 | wxUint32* type, | |
979 | wxUint32* creator); | |
980 | ||
981 | /** | |
982 | On Mac OS, registers application defined extensions and their default type | |
983 | and creator. | |
984 | ||
985 | @onlyfor{wxosx} | |
986 | */ | |
987 | static void MacRegisterDefaultTypeAndCreator(const wxString& ext, | |
988 | wxUint32 type, | |
989 | wxUint32 creator); | |
990 | ||
991 | /** | |
992 | On Mac OS, looks up the appropriate type and creator from the registration | |
993 | and then sets it. | |
994 | ||
995 | @onlyfor{wxosx} | |
996 | */ | |
997 | bool MacSetDefaultTypeAndCreator(); | |
998 | ||
999 | /** | |
1000 | Make the file name absolute. | |
1001 | This is a shortcut for | |
1002 | @code | |
1003 | wxFileName::Normalize(wxPATH_NORM_DOTS | wxPATH_NORM_ABSOLUTE | | |
1004 | wxPATH_NORM_TILDE, cwd, format) | |
1005 | @endcode | |
1006 | ||
1007 | @see MakeRelativeTo(), Normalize(), IsAbsolute() | |
1008 | */ | |
1009 | bool MakeAbsolute(const wxString& cwd = wxEmptyString, | |
1010 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1011 | ||
1012 | /** | |
1013 | This function tries to put this file name in a form relative to | |
1014 | @a pathBase. | |
1015 | In other words, it returns the file name which should be used to access | |
1016 | this file if the current directory were pathBase. | |
1017 | ||
1018 | @param pathBase | |
1019 | The directory to use as root, current directory is used by default | |
1020 | @param format | |
1021 | The file name format, native by default | |
1022 | ||
1023 | @return @true if the file name has been changed, @false if we failed to do | |
1024 | anything with it (currently this only happens if the file name | |
1025 | is on a volume different from the volume specified by @a pathBase). | |
1026 | ||
1027 | @see Normalize() | |
1028 | */ | |
1029 | bool MakeRelativeTo(const wxString& pathBase = wxEmptyString, | |
1030 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1031 | ||
1032 | /** | |
1033 | Creates a directory. | |
1034 | ||
1035 | @param perm | |
1036 | The permissions for the newly created directory. | |
1037 | See the ::wxPosixPermissions enumeration for more info. | |
1038 | @param flags | |
1039 | If the flags contain @c wxPATH_MKDIR_FULL flag, try to create each | |
1040 | directory in the path and also don't return an error if the target | |
1041 | directory already exists. | |
1042 | ||
1043 | @return Returns @true if the directory was successfully created, @false | |
1044 | otherwise. | |
1045 | */ | |
1046 | bool Mkdir(int perm = wxS_DIR_DEFAULT, int flags = 0) const; | |
1047 | ||
1048 | /** | |
1049 | Creates a directory. | |
1050 | ||
1051 | @param dir | |
1052 | The directory to create | |
1053 | @param perm | |
1054 | The permissions for the newly created directory. | |
1055 | See the ::wxPosixPermissions enumeration for more info. | |
1056 | @param flags | |
1057 | If the flags contain @c wxPATH_MKDIR_FULL flag, try to create each | |
1058 | directory in the path and also don't return an error if the target | |
1059 | directory already exists. | |
1060 | ||
1061 | @return Returns @true if the directory was successfully created, @false | |
1062 | otherwise. | |
1063 | */ | |
1064 | static bool Mkdir(const wxString& dir, int perm = wxS_DIR_DEFAULT, | |
1065 | int flags = 0); | |
1066 | ||
1067 | /** | |
1068 | Normalize the path. | |
1069 | ||
1070 | With the default flags value, the path will be made absolute, without | |
1071 | any ".." and "." and all environment variables will be expanded in it. | |
1072 | ||
1073 | Notice that in some rare cases normalizing a valid path may result in | |
1074 | an invalid wxFileName object. E.g. normalizing "./" path using | |
1075 | wxPATH_NORM_DOTS but not wxPATH_NORM_ABSOLUTE will result in a | |
1076 | completely empty and thus invalid object. As long as there is a non | |
1077 | empty file name the result of normalization will be valid however. | |
1078 | ||
1079 | @param flags | |
1080 | The kind of normalization to do with the file name. It can be | |
1081 | any or-combination of the ::wxPathNormalize enumeration values. | |
1082 | @param cwd | |
1083 | If not empty, this directory will be used instead of current | |
1084 | working directory in normalization (see @c wxPATH_NORM_ABSOLUTE). | |
1085 | @param format | |
1086 | The file name format to use when processing the paths, native by default. | |
1087 | ||
1088 | @return @true if normalization was successfully or @false otherwise. | |
1089 | */ | |
1090 | bool Normalize(int flags = wxPATH_NORM_ALL, | |
1091 | const wxString& cwd = wxEmptyString, | |
1092 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1093 | ||
1094 | /** | |
1095 | Prepends a directory to the file path. | |
1096 | Please see AppendDir() for important notes. | |
1097 | */ | |
1098 | void PrependDir(const wxString& dir); | |
1099 | ||
1100 | /** | |
1101 | Removes the specified directory component from the path. | |
1102 | ||
1103 | @see GetDirCount() | |
1104 | */ | |
1105 | void RemoveDir(size_t pos); | |
1106 | ||
1107 | /** | |
1108 | Removes last directory component from the path. | |
1109 | */ | |
1110 | void RemoveLastDir(); | |
1111 | ||
1112 | /** | |
1113 | If the path contains the value of the environment variable named @a envname | |
1114 | then this function replaces it with the string obtained from | |
1115 | wxString::Format(replacementFmtString, value_of_envname_variable). | |
1116 | ||
1117 | This function is useful to make the path shorter or to make it dependent | |
1118 | from a certain environment variable. | |
1119 | Normalize() with @c wxPATH_NORM_ENV_VARS can perform the opposite of this | |
1120 | function (depending on the value of @a replacementFmtString). | |
1121 | ||
1122 | The name and extension of this filename are not modified. | |
1123 | ||
1124 | Example: | |
1125 | @code | |
1126 | wxFileName fn("/usr/openwin/lib/someFile"); | |
1127 | fn.ReplaceEnvVariable("OPENWINHOME"); | |
1128 | // now fn.GetFullPath() == "$OPENWINHOME/lib/someFile" | |
1129 | @endcode | |
1130 | ||
1131 | @since 2.9.0 | |
1132 | ||
1133 | @return @true if the operation was successful (which doesn't mean | |
1134 | that something was actually replaced, just that ::wxGetEnv | |
1135 | didn't fail). | |
1136 | */ | |
1137 | bool ReplaceEnvVariable(const wxString& envname, | |
1138 | const wxString& replacementFmtString = "$%s", | |
1139 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1140 | ||
1141 | /** | |
1142 | Replaces, if present in the path, the home directory for the given user | |
1143 | (see ::wxGetHomeDir) with a tilde (~). | |
1144 | ||
1145 | Normalize() with @c wxPATH_NORM_TILDE performs the opposite of this | |
1146 | function. | |
1147 | ||
1148 | The name and extension of this filename are not modified. | |
1149 | ||
1150 | @since 2.9.0 | |
1151 | ||
1152 | @return @true if the operation was successful (which doesn't mean | |
1153 | that something was actually replaced, just that ::wxGetHomeDir | |
1154 | didn't fail). | |
1155 | */ | |
1156 | bool ReplaceHomeDir(wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1157 | ||
1158 | ||
1159 | /** | |
1160 | Deletes the specified directory from the file system. | |
1161 | ||
1162 | @param flags | |
1163 | Can contain one of wxPATH_RMDIR_FULL or wxPATH_RMDIR_RECURSIVE. By | |
1164 | default contains neither so the directory will not be removed | |
1165 | unless it is empty. | |
1166 | ||
1167 | @return Returns @true if the directory was successfully deleted, @false | |
1168 | otherwise. | |
1169 | */ | |
1170 | bool Rmdir(int flags = 0) const; | |
1171 | ||
1172 | /** | |
1173 | Deletes the specified directory from the file system. | |
1174 | ||
1175 | @param dir | |
1176 | The directory to delete | |
1177 | @param flags | |
1178 | Can contain one of wxPATH_RMDIR_FULL or wxPATH_RMDIR_RECURSIVE. By | |
1179 | default contains neither so the directory will not be removed | |
1180 | unless it is empty. | |
1181 | ||
1182 | @return Returns @true if the directory was successfully deleted, @false | |
1183 | otherwise. | |
1184 | */ | |
1185 | static bool Rmdir(const wxString& dir, int flags = 0); | |
1186 | ||
1187 | /** | |
1188 | Compares the filename using the rules of this platform. | |
1189 | */ | |
1190 | bool SameAs(const wxFileName& filepath, | |
1191 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE) const; | |
1192 | ||
1193 | /** | |
1194 | Changes the current working directory. | |
1195 | */ | |
1196 | bool SetCwd() const; | |
1197 | ||
1198 | /** | |
1199 | Changes the current working directory. | |
1200 | */ | |
1201 | static bool SetCwd(const wxString& cwd); | |
1202 | ||
1203 | /** | |
1204 | Sets the extension of the file name to be an empty extension. | |
1205 | This is different from having no extension at all as the file | |
1206 | name will have a trailing dot after a call to this method. | |
1207 | ||
1208 | @see SetExt(), ClearExt() | |
1209 | */ | |
1210 | void SetEmptyExt(); | |
1211 | ||
1212 | /** | |
1213 | Sets the extension of the file name. | |
1214 | ||
1215 | Setting an empty string as the extension will remove the extension | |
1216 | resulting in a file name without a trailing dot, unlike a call to | |
1217 | SetEmptyExt(). | |
1218 | ||
1219 | @see SetEmptyExt(), ClearExt() | |
1220 | */ | |
1221 | void SetExt(const wxString& ext); | |
1222 | ||
1223 | /** | |
1224 | The full name is the file name and extension (but without the path). | |
1225 | */ | |
1226 | void SetFullName(const wxString& fullname); | |
1227 | ||
1228 | /** | |
1229 | Sets the name part (without extension). | |
1230 | ||
1231 | @see SetFullName() | |
1232 | */ | |
1233 | void SetName(const wxString& name); | |
1234 | ||
1235 | /** | |
1236 | Sets the path. | |
1237 | ||
1238 | The @a path argument includes both the path and the volume, if | |
1239 | supported by @a format. | |
1240 | ||
1241 | Calling this function doesn't affect the name and extension components, | |
1242 | to change them as well you can use Assign() or just an assignment | |
1243 | operator. | |
1244 | ||
1245 | @see GetPath() | |
1246 | */ | |
1247 | void SetPath(const wxString& path, wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1248 | ||
1249 | /** | |
1250 | Sets the file creation and last access/modification times (any of the pointers | |
1251 | may be @NULL). | |
1252 | */ | |
1253 | bool SetTimes(const wxDateTime* dtAccess, | |
1254 | const wxDateTime* dtMod, | |
1255 | const wxDateTime* dtCreate) const; | |
1256 | ||
1257 | /** | |
1258 | Sets the volume specifier. | |
1259 | */ | |
1260 | void SetVolume(const wxString& volume); | |
1261 | ||
1262 | /** | |
1263 | Return whether some operations will follow symlink. | |
1264 | ||
1265 | By default, file operations "follow symlink", i.e. operate on its | |
1266 | target and not on the symlink itself. See DontFollowLink() for more | |
1267 | information. | |
1268 | ||
1269 | @since 2.9.5 | |
1270 | */ | |
1271 | bool ShouldFollowLink() const; | |
1272 | ||
1273 | //@{ | |
1274 | /** | |
1275 | This function splits a full file name into components: the volume (with the | |
1276 | first version) path (including the volume in the second version), the base name | |
1277 | and the extension. | |
1278 | ||
1279 | Any of the output parameters (@e volume, @e path, @a name or @e ext) may | |
1280 | be @NULL if you are not interested in the value of a particular component. | |
1281 | Also, @a fullpath may be empty on entry. | |
1282 | On return, @a path contains the file path (without the trailing separator), | |
1283 | @a name contains the file name and @a ext contains the file extension | |
1284 | without leading dot. All three of them may be empty if the corresponding | |
1285 | component is. The old contents of the strings pointed to by these parameters | |
1286 | will be overwritten in any case (if the pointers are not @NULL). | |
1287 | ||
1288 | Note that for a filename "foo." the extension is present, as indicated by the | |
1289 | trailing dot, but empty. If you need to cope with such cases, you should use | |
1290 | @a hasExt instead of relying on testing whether @a ext is empty or not. | |
1291 | */ | |
1292 | static void SplitPath(const wxString& fullpath, | |
1293 | wxString* volume, | |
1294 | wxString* path, | |
1295 | wxString* name, | |
1296 | wxString* ext, | |
1297 | bool* hasExt = NULL, | |
1298 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1299 | static void SplitPath(const wxString& fullpath, | |
1300 | wxString* volume, | |
1301 | wxString* path, | |
1302 | wxString* name, | |
1303 | wxString* ext, | |
1304 | wxPathFormat format); | |
1305 | static void SplitPath(const wxString& fullpath, | |
1306 | wxString* path, | |
1307 | wxString* name, | |
1308 | wxString* ext, | |
1309 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1310 | //@} | |
1311 | ||
1312 | /** | |
1313 | Splits the given @a fullpath into the volume part (which may be empty) and | |
1314 | the pure path part, not containing any volume. | |
1315 | ||
1316 | @see SplitPath() | |
1317 | */ | |
1318 | static void SplitVolume(const wxString& fullpath, | |
1319 | wxString* volume, | |
1320 | wxString* path, | |
1321 | wxPathFormat format = wxPATH_NATIVE); | |
1322 | ||
1323 | ||
1324 | /** | |
1325 | Strip the file extension. | |
1326 | ||
1327 | This function does more than just removing everything after the last | |
1328 | period from the string, for example it will return the string ".vimrc" | |
1329 | unchanged because the part after the period is not an extension but the | |
1330 | file name in this case. You can use wxString::BeforeLast() to really | |
1331 | get just the part before the last period (but notice that that function | |
1332 | returns empty string if period is not present at all unlike this | |
1333 | function which returns the @a fullname unchanged in this case). | |
1334 | ||
1335 | @param fullname | |
1336 | File path including name and, optionally, extension. | |
1337 | ||
1338 | @return | |
1339 | File path without extension | |
1340 | ||
1341 | @since 2.9.0 | |
1342 | */ | |
1343 | static wxString StripExtension(const wxString& fullname); | |
1344 | ||
1345 | /** | |
1346 | Sets the access and modification times to the current moment. | |
1347 | */ | |
1348 | bool Touch() const; | |
1349 | ||
1350 | /** | |
1351 | Returns @true if the filenames are different. The string @e filenames | |
1352 | is interpreted as a path in the native filename format. | |
1353 | */ | |
1354 | bool operator!=(const wxFileName& filename) const; | |
1355 | ||
1356 | /** | |
1357 | Returns @true if the filenames are different. The string @e filenames | |
1358 | is interpreted as a path in the native filename format. | |
1359 | */ | |
1360 | bool operator!=(const wxString& filename) const; | |
1361 | ||
1362 | /** | |
1363 | Returns @true if the filenames are equal. The string @e filenames is | |
1364 | interpreted as a path in the native filename format. | |
1365 | */ | |
1366 | bool operator==(const wxFileName& filename) const; | |
1367 | ||
1368 | /** | |
1369 | Returns @true if the filenames are equal. The string @e filenames is | |
1370 | interpreted as a path in the native filename format. | |
1371 | */ | |
1372 | bool operator==(const wxString& filename) const; | |
1373 | ||
1374 | /** | |
1375 | Assigns the new value to this filename object. | |
1376 | */ | |
1377 | wxFileName& operator=(const wxFileName& filename); | |
1378 | ||
1379 | /** | |
1380 | Assigns the new value to this filename object. | |
1381 | */ | |
1382 | wxFileName& operator=(const wxString& filename); | |
1383 | }; |