NAME¶
File::Fu - file and directory objects
SYNOPSIS¶
The directory constructor:
use File::Fu;
my $dir = File::Fu->dir("bar");
print "$dir\n"; # 'bar/'
my $file = $dir + 'bar.txt';
print "$file\n"; # 'bar/bar.txt'
my $d2 = $dir % 'baz'; # 'barbaz/'
my $d3 = $dir / 'bat'; # 'bar/bat/'
my $file2 = $dir / 'bat' + 'foo.txt'; # 'bar/bat/foo.txt'
The file constructor:
my $file = File::Fu->file("foo");
$file->e and warn "$file exists";
$file->l and warn "$file is a link";
warn "file is in ", $file->dir;
ABOUT¶
This class provides the toplevel interface to File::Fu directory and file
objects, with operator overloading which allows precise path composition and
support for most builtin methods, as well as creation of temporary
files/directories, finding files, and more.
The interface and style are quite different than the perl builtins or
File::Spec. The syntax is concise. Errors are thrown with
croak(), so
you never need to check a return code.
Constructors¶
The actual objects are in the 'Dir' and 'File' sub-namespaces.
dir¶
my $dir = File::Fu->dir($path);
See "new" in File::Fu::Dir
file¶
my $file = File::Fu->file($path);
See "new" in File::Fu::File
Class Constants¶
tmp¶
Your system's '/tmp/' directory (or equivalent of that.)
my $dir = File::Fu->tmp;
home¶
User's $HOME directory.
my $dir = File::Fu->home;
program_name¶
The absolute name of your program. This will be relative from the time File::Fu
was loaded. It dies if the name is '-e'.
my $prog = File::Fu->program_name;
If File::Fu was loaded after a chdir and the $0 was relative, calling
program_name() throws an error. (Unless you set $0 correctly before
requiring File::Fu.)
program_dir¶
Returns what typically corresponds to
program_name()->dirname, but
just the compile-time
cwd() when $0 is -e/-E.
my $dir = File::Fu->program_dir;
Class Methods¶
THIS_FILE¶
A nicer way to say __FILE__.
my $file = File::Fu->THIS_FILE;
cwd¶
The current working directory.
my $dir = File::Fu->cwd;
which¶
Returns File::Fu::File objects of ordered candidates for $name found in the
path.
my @prog = File::Fu->which($name) or die "cannot find $name";
If called in scalar context, returns a single File::Fu::File object or throws an
error if no candidates were found.
my $prog = File::Fu->which($name);
Temporary Directories and Files¶
These class methods call the corresponding File::Fu::Dir methods on the value of
tmp(). That is, you get a temporary file/dir in the '/tmp/' directory.
temp_dir¶
my $dir = File::Fu->temp_dir;
temp_file¶
my $handle = File::Fu->temp_file;
Subclassing¶
You may wish to subclass File:Fu and override the
dir_class() and/or
file_class() class methods to point to your own Dir/File subclasses.
my $class = 'My::FileFu';
my $dir = $class->dir("foo");
See File::Fu::File and File::Fu::Dir for more info.
See Also¶
File::Fu::why if I need to explain my motivations.
Path::Class, from which many an idea was taken.
File::stat, IO::File, File::Spec, File::Find, File::Temp, File::Path,
File::Basename, perlfunc, perlopentut.
AUTHOR¶
Eric Wilhelm @ <ewilhelm at cpan dot org>
http://scratchcomputing.com/
BUGS¶
If you found this module on CPAN, please report any bugs or feature requests
through the web interface at <
http://rt.cpan.org>. I will be notified,
and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make
changes.
If you pulled this development version from my /svn/, please contact me
directly.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2008 Eric L. Wilhelm, All Rights Reserved.
NO WARRANTY¶
Absolutely, positively NO WARRANTY, neither express or implied, is offered with
this software. You use this software at your own risk. In case of loss, no
person or entity owes you anything whatsoever. You have been warned.
LICENSE¶
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.