Apropos

pathname-host, pathname-device, pathname-directory, pathname-name, pathname-type, pathname-versionFunction

    Syntax

    pathname-host pathname &key case host

    pathname-device pathname &key case device

    pathname-directory pathname &key case directory

    pathname-name pathname &key case name

    pathname-type pathname &key case type

    pathname-version pathname version

    Arguments and Values

    pathname — a pathname designator.

    case — one of :local or :common. The default is :local.

    host — a valid pathname host.

    device — a valid pathname device.

    directory — a valid pathname directory.

    name — a valid pathname name.

    type — a valid pathname type.

    version — a valid pathname version.

    Description

    These functions return the components of pathname.

    If the pathname designator is a pathname, it represents the name used to open the file. This may be, but is not required to be, the actual name of the file.

    If case is supplied, it is treated as described in Section 19.2.2.1.2 (Case in Pathname Components).

    Examples
     (setq q (make-pathname :host "KATHY" 
                            :directory "CHAPMAN" 
                            :name "LOGIN" :type "COM")) 
     #P"KATHY::[CHAPMAN]LOGIN.COM" 
     (pathname-host q)  "KATHY" 
     (pathname-name q)  "LOGIN" 
     (pathname-type q)  "COM" 
    
     ;; Because namestrings are used, the results shown in the remaining 
     ;; examples are not necessarily the only possible results.  Mappings 
     ;; from namestring representation to pathname representation are 
     ;; dependent both on the file system involved and on the implementation 
     ;; (since there may be several implementations which can manipulate the 
     ;; the same file system, and those implementations are not constrained 
     ;; to agree on all details). Consult the documentation for each 
     ;; implementation for specific information on how namestrings are treated 
     ;; that implementation. 
    
     ;; VMS 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring "[FOO.*.BAR]BAZ.LSP")) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "FOO" "BAR") 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring "[FOO.*.BAR]BAZ.LSP") :case :common) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "FOO" "BAR") 
    
     ;; Unix 
     (pathname-directory "foo.l")  NIL 
     (pathname-device "foo.l")  :UNSPECIFIC 
     (pathname-name "foo.l")  "foo" 
     (pathname-name "foo.l" :case :local)  "foo" 
     (pathname-name "foo.l" :case :common)  "FOO" 
     (pathname-type "foo.l")  "l" 
     (pathname-type "foo.l" :case :local)  "l" 
     (pathname-type "foo.l" :case :common)  "L" 
     (pathname-type "foo")  :UNSPECIFIC 
     (pathname-type "foo" :case :common)  :UNSPECIFIC 
     (pathname-type "foo.")  "" 
     (pathname-type "foo." :case :common)  "" 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring "/foo/bar/baz.lisp") :case :local) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "foo" "bar") 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring "/foo/bar/baz.lisp") :case :local) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "FOO" "BAR") 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring "../baz.lisp")) 
     (:RELATIVE :UP) 
     (PATHNAME-DIRECTORY (PARSE-NAMESTRING "/foo/BAR/../Mum/baz")) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "foo" "BAR" :UP "Mum") 
     (PATHNAME-DIRECTORY (PARSE-NAMESTRING "/foo/BAR/../Mum/baz") :case :common) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "FOO" "bar" :UP "Mum") 
     (PATHNAME-DIRECTORY (PARSE-NAMESTRING "/foo/*/bar/baz.l")) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "foo" :WILD "bar") 
     (PATHNAME-DIRECTORY (PARSE-NAMESTRING "/foo/*/bar/baz.l") :case :common) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "FOO" :WILD "BAR") 
    
     ;; Symbolics LMFS 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring ">foo>**>bar>baz.lisp")) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "foo" :WILD-INFERIORS "bar") 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring ">foo>*>bar>baz.lisp")) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "foo" :WILD "bar") 
     (pathname-directory (parse-namestring ">foo>*>bar>baz.lisp") :case :common) 
     (:ABSOLUTE "FOO" :WILD "BAR") 
     (pathname-device (parse-namestring ">foo>baz.lisp"))  :UNSPECIFIC
    Affected By

    The implementation and the host file system.

    Exceptional Situations

    Should signal an error of type type-error if its first argument is not a pathname.

    See Also

    pathname, logical-pathname, Section 20.1 (File System Concepts), Section 19.1.2 (Pathnames as Filenames)