NAME¶
File::FnMatch - simple filename and pathname matching
SYNOPSIS¶
use File::FnMatch qw(:fnmatch); # import everything
# shell-style: match "/a/bc", but not "/a/.bc" nor "/a/b/c"
fnmatch("/a/*", $fn, FNM_PATHNAME|FNM_PERIOD);
# find our A- executables only
grep { fnmatch("A-*.exe", $_) } readdir SOMEDIR;
DESCRIPTION¶
File::FnMatch::fnmatch() provides simple, shell-like pattern matching.
Though considerably less powerful than regular expressions, shell patterns are
nonetheless useful and familiar to a large audience of end-users.
Functions¶
- fnmatch ( PATTERN, STRING [, FLAGS] )
- Returns true if PATTERN matches STRING, undef
otherwise. FLAGS may be the bitwise OR'ing of any supported FNM_*
constants (see below).
Constants¶
- FNM_NOESCAPE
- Do not treat a backslash ('\') in PATTERN specially.
Otherwise, a backslash escapes the following character.
- FNM_PATHNAME
- Prohibit wildcards from matching a slash ('/').
- FNM_PERIOD
- Prohibit wildcards from matching a period ('.') at the
start of a string and, if FNM_PATHNAME is also given, immediately after a
slash.
Other possibilities include at least FNM_CASEFOLD (compare "qr//i"),
FNM_LEADING_DIR to restrict matching to everything before the first '/',
FNM_FILE_NAME as a synonym for FNM_PATHNAME, and the rather more exotic
FNM_EXTMATCH. Consult your system documentation for details.
EXPORT¶
None by default. The export tag ":fnmatch" exports the fnmatch
function and all available FNM_* constants.
PATTERN SYNTAX¶
Wildcards are the question mark ('?') to match any single character and the
asterisk ('*') to match zero or more characters. FNM_PATHNAME and FNM_PERIOD
restrict the scope of the wildcards, notably supporting the UNIX convention of
concealing "dotfiles":
Bracket expressions, enclosed by '[' and ']', match any of a set of characters
specified explicitly ("[abcdef]"), as a range
("[a-f0-9]"), or as the combination these ("[a-f0-9XYZ]").
Additionally, many implementations support named character classes such as
"[[:xdigit:]]". Character sets may be negated with an initial '!'
("[![:space:]]").
Locale influences the meaning of
fnmatch() patterns.
CAVEATS¶
Most UNIX-like systems provide an fnmatch implementation. This module will not
work on platforms lacking an implementation, most notably Win32.
SEE ALSO¶
File::Glob, POSIX::setlocale,
fnmatch(3)
AUTHOR¶
Michael J. Pomraning
Please report bugs to <mjp-perl AT pilcrow.madison.wi.us>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
Copyright 2005 by Michael J. Pomraning
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.