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The operating system groups files into directories. To specify a file, you must specify the directory and the file’s name within that directory. Therefore, Emacs considers a file name as having two main parts: the directory name part, and the nondirectory part (or file name within the directory). Either part may be empty. Concatenating these two parts reproduces the original file name.
On most systems, the directory part is everything up to and including the last slash (backslash is also allowed in input on MS-DOS or MS-Windows); the nondirectory part is the rest.
For some purposes, the nondirectory part is further subdivided into the name proper and the version number. On most systems, only backup files have version numbers in their names.
This function returns the directory part of
filename, as a directory name (see Directory Names),
or nil if filename does not include a
directory part.
On GNU and Unix systems, a string returned by this function always ends in a slash. On MS-DOS it can also end in a colon.
(file-name-directory "lewis/foo") ; Unix example
⇒ "lewis/"
(file-name-directory "foo") ; Unix example
⇒ nil
This function returns the nondirectory part of filename.
(file-name-nondirectory "lewis/foo")
⇒ "foo"
(file-name-nondirectory "foo")
⇒ "foo"
(file-name-nondirectory "lewis/")
⇒ ""
This function returns filename with any file version numbers, backup version numbers, or trailing tildes discarded.
If keep-backup-version is non-nil,
then true file version numbers understood as such by the file
system are discarded from the return value, but backup
version numbers are kept.
(file-name-sans-versions "~rms/foo.~1~")
⇒ "~rms/foo"
(file-name-sans-versions "~rms/foo~")
⇒ "~rms/foo"
(file-name-sans-versions "~rms/foo")
⇒ "~rms/foo"
This function returns filename’s final
extension, if any, after applying
file-name-sans-versions to remove any
version/backup part. The extension, in a file name, is the
part that follows the last ‘.’ in
the last name component (minus any version/backup part).
This function returns nil for extensionless
file names such as foo. It returns
"" for null extensions, as in foo..
If the last component of a file name begins with a
‘.’, that
‘.’ doesn’t count as the
beginning of an extension. Thus, .emacs’s
extension is nil, not
‘.emacs’.
If period is non-nil, then the
returned value includes the period that delimits the
extension, and if filename has no extension, the
value is "".
This function returns filename minus its extension, if any. The version/backup part, if present, is only removed if the file has an extension. For example,
(file-name-sans-extension "foo.lose.c")
⇒ "foo.lose"
(file-name-sans-extension "big.hack/foo")
⇒ "big.hack/foo"
(file-name-sans-extension "/my/home/.emacs")
⇒ "/my/home/.emacs"
(file-name-sans-extension "/my/home/.emacs.el")
⇒ "/my/home/.emacs"
(file-name-sans-extension "~/foo.el.~3~")
⇒ "~/foo"
(file-name-sans-extension "~/foo.~3~")
⇒ "~/foo.~3~"
Note that the ‘.~3~’ in the two last examples is the backup part, not an extension.
This function is the composition of
file-name-sans-extension and
file-name-nondirectory. For example,
(file-name-base "/my/home/foo.c")
⇒ "foo"
The filename argument defaults to
buffer-file-name.
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