- Documentation
- Reference manual
- Built-in Predicates
- File System Interaction
- access_file/2
- exists_file/1
- file_directory_name/2
- file_base_name/2
- same_file/2
- exists_directory/1
- delete_file/1
- rename_file/2
- size_file/2
- time_file/2
- absolute_file_name/2
- absolute_file_name/3
- is_absolute_file_name/1
- file_name_extension/3
- directory_files/2
- expand_file_name/2
- prolog_to_os_filename/2
- read_link/3
- tmp_file/2
- tmp_file_stream/3
- make_directory/1
- delete_directory/1
- working_directory/2
- chdir/1
- File System Interaction
- Built-in Predicates
- Packages
- Reference manual
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’,‘*
’,‘[
...
’and‘{...}
’are recognised. The
interpretation of‘{...}
’is slightly different
from the C shell (csh(1)). The comma-separated argument can be arbitrary
patterns, including‘{...}
’patterns. The empty
pattern is legal as well:‘{.pl,}
’matches either‘.pl
’or
the empty string.
If the pattern contains wildcard characters, only existing files and directories are returned. Expanding a‘pattern’without wildcard characters returns the argument, regardless of whether or not it exists.
Before expanding wildcards, the construct $\arg{var}
is
expanded to the value of the environment variable var, and a
possible leading ~
character is expanded to the user's home
directory.161On Windows, the home
directory is determined as follows: if the environment variable HOME
exists, this is used. If the variables HOMEDRIVE
and HOMEPATH
exist (Windows-NT), these are used. At initialisation, the system will
set the environment variable HOME
to point to the
SWI-Prolog home directory if neither HOME
nor HOMEPATH
and HOMEDRIVE
are defined.