[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
All the directories in the file system form a tree starting at the root directory. A file name can specify all the directory names starting from the root of the tree; then it is called an absolute file name. Or it can specify the position of the file in the tree relative to a default directory; then it is called a relative file name. On Unix and GNU/Linux, an absolute file name starts with a slash or a tilde (`~'), and a relative one does not. On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, an absolute file name starts with a slash or a backslash, or with a drive specification `x:/', where x is the drive letter. The rules on VMS are complicated.
t
if file filename is an absolute
file name, nil
otherwise. On VMS, this function understands both
Unix syntax and VMS syntax.
(file-name-absolute-p "~rms/foo") => t (file-name-absolute-p "rms/foo") => nil (file-name-absolute-p "/user/rms/foo") => t |