Message152952
| Author |
pitrou |
| Recipients |
eli.bendersky, eric.araujo, giampaolo.rodola, ncoghlan, pitrou, r.david.murray, ubershmekel |
| Date |
2012年02月09日.15:46:55 |
| SpamBayes Score |
0.0013833996 |
| Marked as misclassified |
No |
| Message-id |
<1328802247.3352.17.camel@localhost.localdomain> |
| In-reply-to |
<1328796499.25.0.569771001948.issue13968@psf.upfronthosting.co.za> |
| Content |
> * Behave like a glob for every subdirectory. Meaning that every
> relative path gets a '*/' prepended to it. Eg rglob('c/d') started
> from the directory 'a' will yield 'a/b/c/d'.
That's what I would expect. That way, rglob('__init__.py') would find
all files named __init__.py beneath the current directory.
> P.s. another slight issue I ran into is the fact that fnmatch doesn't
> ignore os.curdir:
>
> >>> fnmatch.fnmatch('./a', 'a')
> False
Sounds ok. fnmatch is a low-level lexical thing. |
|