14.1.2 More Path Utilities
procedure
(explode-path path)
→ (listof (or/c path-for-some-system? 'up 'same)) path : (or/c path-string? path-for-some-system?)
procedure
(file-name-from-path path) → (or/c path-for-some-system? #f)
path : (or/c path-string? path-for-some-system?)
procedure
(filename-extension path) → (or/c bytes? #f)
path : (or/c path-string? path-for-some-system?)
procedure
(find-relative-path base path [ #:more-than-root? more-than-root?]) → path-for-some-system? base : (or/c path-string? path-for-some-system?) path : (or/c path-string? path-for-some-system?) more-than-root? : any/c = #f
If more-than-root? is true, if base and path share only a Unix root in common, and if neither base nor path is just a root path, then path is returned.
procedure
(normalize-path path [wrt]) → path?
path : path-string?
wrt : (and/c path-string? complete-path?) = (current-directory)
For most purposes, simple-form-path is the preferred mechanism to normalize a path, because it works for paths that include non-existent directory components, and it avoids unnecessarily expanding soft links.
Returns a complete version of path by making the path complete, expanding the complete path, and resolving all soft links (which requires consulting the filesystem). If path is relative, then wrt is used as the base path.
Letter case is not normalized by normalize-path. For this and other reasons, such as whether the path is syntactically a directory, the result of normalize-path is not suitable for comparisons that determine whether two paths refer to the same file or directory (i.e., the comparison may produce false negatives).
An error is signaled by normalize-path if the input path contains an embedded path for a non-existent directory, or if an infinite cycle of soft links is detected.
procedure
(path-element? path) → boolean?
path : any/c
procedure
(path-only path) → (or/c #f path-for-some-system?)
path : (or/c path-string? path-for-some-system?)
procedure
(simple-form-path path) → path?
path : path-string?
procedure
(some-system-path->string path) → string?
path : path-for-some-system?
Use this function when working with paths for a different system (whose encoding of pathnames might be unrelated to the current locale’s encoding) and when starting and ending with strings.
procedure
(string->some-system-path str kind) → path-for-some-system?
str : string? kind : (or/c 'unix 'windows)
Use this function when working with paths for a different system (whose encoding of pathnames might be unrelated to the current locale’s encoding) and when starting and ending with strings.