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Re: Behaviour of is-absolute?
From: |
Carl Sorensen |
Subject: |
Re: Behaviour of is-absolute? |
Date: |
Mon, 25 Jan 2016 04:40:46 +0000 |
User-agent: |
Microsoft-MacOutlook/14.5.9.151119 |
On 1/24/16 3:35 PM, "address@hidden on
behalf of Urs Liska" <address@hidden on
behalf of address@hidden> wrote:
>Hi all,
>
>now that is-absolute? is not broken anymore (see #4746 and #4747) I'd
>like to raise the question of its *behaviour* - which seems somewhat
>inconsistent to me.
>
>Currently this function behaves differently on Windows and elsewhere,
>and I think this shouldn't be the case.
>
>is-absolute? expects a string representing a file path.
>It returns true if either
>
>it starts with a slash
>or
>if on Windows it starts with a drive letter.
>
>So
>
>(is-absolute? "/some/path")
>always returns #t
>
>but
>(is-absolute? "C:\some\path")
>or
>(is-absolute? "C:/some/path")
>
>returns #t on Windows but #f on Unix.
It seems to me that "\some\path" is a "sort-of" absolute windows path. It
is an absolute path on the current drive. It's certainly not a relative
path in the normal sense, meaning that we need to add on the current
directory if we want to get to an absolute path.
Windows has the concept of a drive spec, (C:), unlike linux, which just
has mount points.
So I'm not sure what the best way to handle it.
I guess I'm not much help.
Carl