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Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
ad51192a
Commit
ad51192a
authored
Feb 16, 1998
by
Fred Drake
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Plain Diff
In the example file name, use the current Python version, not a hardcoded
value. Use logical markup.
parent
2705e801
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2
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Doc/lib/libglob.tex
Doc/lib/libglob.tex
+7
-7
Doc/libglob.tex
Doc/libglob.tex
+7
-7
No files found.
Doc/lib/libglob.tex
View file @
ad51192a
...
...
@@ -3,25 +3,25 @@
\stmodindex
{
glob
}
\setindexsubitem
{
(in module glob)
}
The
\
cod
e
{
glob
}
module finds all the pathnames matching a specified
The
\
modul
e
{
glob
}
module finds all the pathnames matching a specified
pattern according to the rules used by the
\UNIX
{}
shell. No tilde
expansion is done, but
\code
{
*
}
,
\code
{
?
}
, and character ranges
expressed with
\code
{
[]
}
will be correctly matched. This is done by
using the
\
code
{
os.listdir()
}
and
\code
{
fnmatch.fnmatch()
}
functions
in concert, and not by actually invoking a subshell. (For tilde and
shell variable expansion, use
\code
{
os.path.expanduser(
}
) and
\code
{
os.path.expandvars()
}
.)
using the
\
function
{
os.listdir()
}
and
\function
{
fnmatch.fnmatch()
}
functions in concert, and not by actually invoking a subshell. (For
tilde and shell variable expansion, use
\function
{
os.path.expanduser()
}
and
\function
{
os.path.expandvars()
}
.)
\begin{funcdesc}
{
glob
}{
pathname
}
Returns a possibly-empty list of path names that match
\var
{
pathname
}
,
which must be a string containing a path specification.
\var
{
pathname
}
can be either absolute (like
\file
{
/usr/src/Python
1.4
/Makefile
}
) or relative (like
\file
{
/usr/src/Python
\version
/Makefile
}
) or relative (like
\file
{
../../Tools/*.gif
}
), and can contain shell-style wildcards.
\end{funcdesc}
For example, consider a directory containing only the following files:
\file
{
1.gif
}
,
\file
{
2.txt
}
, and
\file
{
card.gif
}
.
\
code
{
glob.glob()
}
\file
{
1.gif
}
,
\file
{
2.txt
}
, and
\file
{
card.gif
}
.
\
function
{
glob.glob()
}
will produce the following results. Notice how any leading components
of the path are preserved.
...
...
Doc/libglob.tex
View file @
ad51192a
...
...
@@ -3,25 +3,25 @@
\stmodindex
{
glob
}
\setindexsubitem
{
(in module glob)
}
The
\
cod
e
{
glob
}
module finds all the pathnames matching a specified
The
\
modul
e
{
glob
}
module finds all the pathnames matching a specified
pattern according to the rules used by the
\UNIX
{}
shell. No tilde
expansion is done, but
\code
{
*
}
,
\code
{
?
}
, and character ranges
expressed with
\code
{
[]
}
will be correctly matched. This is done by
using the
\
code
{
os.listdir()
}
and
\code
{
fnmatch.fnmatch()
}
functions
in concert, and not by actually invoking a subshell. (For tilde and
shell variable expansion, use
\code
{
os.path.expanduser(
}
) and
\code
{
os.path.expandvars()
}
.)
using the
\
function
{
os.listdir()
}
and
\function
{
fnmatch.fnmatch()
}
functions in concert, and not by actually invoking a subshell. (For
tilde and shell variable expansion, use
\function
{
os.path.expanduser()
}
and
\function
{
os.path.expandvars()
}
.)
\begin{funcdesc}
{
glob
}{
pathname
}
Returns a possibly-empty list of path names that match
\var
{
pathname
}
,
which must be a string containing a path specification.
\var
{
pathname
}
can be either absolute (like
\file
{
/usr/src/Python
1.4
/Makefile
}
) or relative (like
\file
{
/usr/src/Python
\version
/Makefile
}
) or relative (like
\file
{
../../Tools/*.gif
}
), and can contain shell-style wildcards.
\end{funcdesc}
For example, consider a directory containing only the following files:
\file
{
1.gif
}
,
\file
{
2.txt
}
, and
\file
{
card.gif
}
.
\
code
{
glob.glob()
}
\file
{
1.gif
}
,
\file
{
2.txt
}
, and
\file
{
card.gif
}
.
\
function
{
glob.glob()
}
will produce the following results. Notice how any leading components
of the path are preserved.
...
...
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