Function
GLibpath_is_absolute
Declaration [src]
gboolean
g_path_is_absolute(
constgchar*file_name
)
Description [src]
Returns TRUE if the given file_name is an absolute file name.
Note that this is a somewhat vague concept on Windows.
On POSIX systems, an absolute file name is well-defined. It always starts from the single root directory. For example “/usr/local”.
On Windows, the concepts of current drive and drive-specific current directory introduce vagueness. This function interprets as an absolute file name one that either begins with a directory separator such as “\Users\tml” or begins with the root on a drive, for example “C:\Windows”. The first case also includes UNC paths such as “\myserver\docs\foo”. In all cases, either slashes or backslashes are accepted.
Note that a file name relative to the current drive root does not truly specify a file uniquely over time and across processes, as the current drive is a per-process value and can be changed.
File names relative the current directory on some specific drive,
such as “D:foo/bar”, are not interpreted as absolute by this
function, but they obviously are not relative to the normal current
directory as returned by getcwd() or g_get_current_dir()
either. Such paths should be avoided, or need to be handled using
Windows-specific code.
Parameters
file_name-
Type:
const gchar*A file name.
The data is owned by the caller of the function.The value is a platform-native string, using the preferred OS encoding on Unix and UTF-8 on Windows.
Return value
Type: gboolean
TRUE if file_name is absolute.