Tcl_SplitPath(3) Tcl Library Procedures Tcl_SplitPath(3)______________________________________________________________________________NAME
Tcl_SplitPath, Tcl_JoinPath, Tcl_GetPathType - manipulate platform-
dependent file paths
SYNOPSIS
#include <tcl.h>
Tcl_SplitPath(path, argcPtr, argvPtr)
char *
Tcl_JoinPath(argc, argv, resultPtr)
Tcl_PathType
Tcl_GetPathType(path)ARGUMENTS
const char *path (in) File path in a form appro‐
priate for the current plat‐
form (see the filename man‐
ual entry for acceptable
forms for path names).
int *argcPtr (out) Filled in with number of
path elements in path.
const char ***argvPtr (out) *argvPtr will be filled in
with the address of an array
of pointers to the strings
that are the extracted ele‐
ments of path. There will
be *argcPtr valid entries in
the array, followed by a
NULL entry.
int argc (in) Number of elements in argv.
const char *const *argv (in) Array of path elements to
merge together into a single
path.
Tcl_DString *resultPtr (in/out) A pointer to an initialized
Tcl_DString to which the
result of Tcl_JoinPath will
be appended.
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
These procedures have been superceded by the objectified procedures in
the FileSystem man page, which are more efficient.
These procedures may be used to disassemble and reassemble file paths
in a platform independent manner: they provide C-level access to the
same functionality as the file split, file join, and file pathtype com‐
mands.
Tcl_SplitPath breaks a path into its constituent elements, returning an
array of pointers to the elements using argcPtr and argvPtr. The area
of memory pointed to by *argvPtr is dynamically allocated; in addition
to the array of pointers, it also holds copies of all the path ele‐
ments. It is the caller's responsibility to free all of this storage.
For example, suppose that you have called Tcl_SplitPath with the fol‐
lowing code:
int argc;
char *path;
char **argv;
...
Tcl_SplitPath(string, &argc, &argv);
Then you should eventually free the storage with a call like the fol‐
lowing:
Tcl_Free((char *) argv);
Tcl_JoinPath is the inverse of Tcl_SplitPath: it takes a collection of
path elements given by argc and argv and generates a result string that
is a properly constructed path. The result string is appended to
resultPtr. ResultPtr must refer to an initialized Tcl_DString.
If the result of Tcl_SplitPath is passed to Tcl_JoinPath, the result
will refer to the same location, but may not be in the same form. This
is because Tcl_SplitPath and Tcl_JoinPath eliminate duplicate path sep‐
arators and return a normalized form for each platform.
Tcl_GetPathType returns the type of the specified path, where
Tcl_PathType is one of TCL_PATH_ABSOLUTE, TCL_PATH_RELATIVE, or
TCL_PATH_VOLUME_RELATIVE. See the filename manual entry for a descrip‐
tion of the path types for each platform.
KEYWORDS
file, filename, join, path, split, type
Tcl 7.5 Tcl_SplitPath(3)