12.4.16.4 Getting file names
The function PL_get_file_name() provides access to Prolog filenames and its file-search mechanism described with absolute_file_name/3. Its existence is motivated to realise a uniform interface to deal with file properties, search, naming conventions, etc., from foreign code.
- int PL_get_file_name(term_t spec, char **name, int flags)
- Translate a Prolog term into a file name. The name is stored in the
buffer stack described with the PL_get_chars()
option
BUF_STACK
. Conversion from the internal UNICODE encoding is done using standard C library functions. flags is a bit-mask controlling the conversion process. Options are:PL_FILE_ABSOLUTE
- Return an absolute path to the requested file.
PL_FILE_OSPATH
- Return the name using the hosting OS conventions. On MS-Windows,
is used to separate directories rather than the canonical\
./
PL_FILE_SEARCH
- Invoke absolute_file_name/3. This implies rules from file_search_path/2 are used.
PL_FILE_EXIST
- Demand the path to refer to an existing entity.
PL_FILE_READ
- Demand read-access on the result.
PL_FILE_WRITE
- Demand write-access on the result.
PL_FILE_EXECUTE
- Demand execute-access on the result.
PL_FILE_NOERRORS
- Do not raise any exceptions.
- int PL_get_file_nameW(term_t spec, wchar_t **name, int flags)
- Same as PL_get_file_name(),
but returns the filename as a wide-character string. This is intended
for Windows to access the Unicode version of the Win32 API. Note that
the flag
PL_FILE_OSPATH
must be provided to fetch a filename in OS native (e.g.,C:\x\y
) notation.