Typed Path
Provides typed variants of
Path
and
PathBuf
for Unix
and Windows.
Install
[]
= "0.4"
Why?
Some applications need to manipulate Windows or UNIX paths on different platforms, for a variety of reasons: constructing portable file formats, parsing files from other platforms, handling archive formats, working with certain network protocols, and so on.
-- Josh Triplett
Check out this issue of a discussion for this. The functionality actually exists within the standard library, but is not exposed!
This means that parsing a path like C:\path\to\file.txt
will be parsed
differently by std::path::Path
depending on which platform you are on!
use Path;
Usage
Byte paths
The library provides a generic Path<T>
and PathBuf<T>
that use [u8]
and
Vec<u8>
underneath instead of OsStr
and OsString
. An encoding generic
type is provided to dictate how the underlying bytes are parsed in order to
support consistent path functionality no matter what operating system you are
compiling against!
use WindowsPath;
UTF8-enforced paths
Alongside the byte paths, this library also supports UTF8-enforced paths
through UTF8Path<T>
and UTF8PathBuf<T>
, which internally use str
and
String
. An encoding generic type is provided to dictate how the underlying
characters are parsed in order to support consistent path functionality no
matter what operating system you are
compiling against!
use Utf8WindowsPath;
Converting between encodings
There may be times in which you need to convert between encodings such as when
you want to load a native path and convert it into another format. In that
case, you can use the with_encoding
method to convert a Path
or Utf8Path
into their respective PathBuf
and Utf8PathBuf
with an explicit encoding:
use ;
Normalization
Alongside implementing the standard methods associated with
Path
and
PathBuf
from the
standard library, this crate also implements several additional methods
including the ability to normalize a path by resolving .
and ..
without the
need to have the path exist.
use Utf8UnixPath;
assert_eq!;
In addition, you can leverage absolutize
to convert a path to an absolute
form by prepending the current working directory if the path is relative and
then normalizing it:
use ;
// With an absolute path, it is just normalized
let path = new;
assert_eq!;
// With a relative path, it is first joined with the current working directory
// and then normalized
let cwd = utf8_current_dir.unwrap.with_unix_encoding;
let path = cwd.join;
assert_eq!;
Current directory
Helper functions are available in the utils
module, and one of those provides
an identical experience to
std::env::current_dir
:
// Retrieves the current directory as a NativePath:
//
// * For Unix family, this would be Path<UnixEncoding>
// * For Windows family, this would be Path<WindowsEncoding>
let _cwd = current_dir.unwrap;
// Retrieves the current directory as a Utf8NativePath:
//
// * For Unix family, this would be Utf8Path<Utf8UnixEncoding>
// * For Windows family, this would be Utf8Path<Utf8WindowsEncoding>
let _utf8_cwd = utf8_current_dir.unwrap;
License
This project is licensed under either of
Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or apache-license) MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or mit-license) at your option.