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C++ Library -
The
The
Including Header
To include the
#include
Functions of Header
Below is list of all functions from
Path Manipulation Functions
This path manipulation functions operate on file paths to compose, convert or resolve them.
S.No | Functions & Description |
---|---|
1 |
absolute
This function composes an absolute path based on a given relative or absolute path. |
2 |
canonical & weakly_canonical
These functions convert a path to its canonical form by by resolving all symbolic links and relative paths. |
3 |
relative, proximate
These functions composes a relative path from one path to another. |
4 |
copy
This function copies files or directories. |
5 |
copy_file
This function copies the contents of a single file. |
6 |
copy_symlink
This function copies a symbolic link. |
7 |
create_directory, create_directories
These functions creates single/multiple new directory. |
8 |
create_hard_link
This function creates a hard link, allowing a single file to have multiple directory entries. |
9 |
create_symlink, create_directory_symlink
These functions creates a symbolic link for a file. |
10 |
current_path
This function returns or sets the current working directory. |
11 |
exists
This function checks whether path refers to existing file system object. |
12 |
equivalent
This function checks whether two paths refer to the same file system object. |
13 |
file_size
This function returns the size of a file. |
14 |
hard_link_count
This function returns the number of hard links referring to the specific file. |
15 |
last_write_time
This function gets or sets the time of the last data modification. |
16 |
permissions
This function modifies file access permissions. |
17 |
read_symlink
This function obtains the target of a symbolic link. |
18 |
remove
This function removes a file or empty directory. |
19 |
remove_all
This function removes a file or removes a file or directory and all its contents, recursively. |
20 |
rename
This function moves or renames a file or directory. |
21 |
resize_file
This function changes the size of a regular file by truncation or zero-fill. |
22 |
space
This function determines available free space on the file system. |
Path Manipulation Example
In the following example we are going to use, exists() checking whether the specified path (filePath) refers to an existing file system object.
#include#include int main() { std::filesystem::path filePath{"example.txt"}; if (std::filesystem::exists(filePath)) { std::cout << "The file exists." << std::endl; } else { std::cout << "The file does not exist." << std::endl; } return 0; }
Output
If we run the above code it will generate the following output
The file does not exist.
File types
The
S.No | Functions & Description |
---|---|
1 |
is_block_file
This function checks whether the given path refers to block device. |
2 |
is_character_file
This function checks whether the given path refers to a character device. |
3 |
is_directory
This function checks whether the given path refers to a directory. |
4 |
is_empty
This function checks whether the given path refers to an empty file or directory. |
5 |
is_fifo
This function checks whether the given path refers to a named pipe. |
6 |
is_other
This function checks whether the argument refers to an other file. |
7 |
is_regular_file
This function checks whether the argument refers to a regular file. |
8 |
is_socket
This function checks whether the argument refers to a named IPC socket. |
9 |
is_symlink
This function checks whether the argument refers to a symbolic link. |
10 |
status_known
This function checks whether file status is known. |
Checking the Specified Path
In the following example we are going to use, is_directory to check if the specified path (dirPath) refers to a directory.
#include#include int main() { std::filesystem::path dirPath{"my_directory"}; if (std::filesystem::is_directory(dirPath)) { std::cout << "This path refers to a directory." << std::endl; } else { std::cout << "This path does not refer to a directory." << std::endl; } return 0; }
Output
If we run the above code it will generate the following output
This path does not refer to a directory.