Hi,
I've found that `cygpath --windows '../` will give back an absolute
windows path.
I thought this would only happen if you provide the `--absolute` flag,
or when the path is a special cygwin path.
But this occurs just for normal directories.
I have come across a situation where I need to convert ntfs symlinks to
unix symlinks and back. Sometimes these symlinks have relative paths
them. Now by using cygpath --windows, I get back absolute paths, which
means the integrity of the symlink isn't preserved.
Can `cygpath --windows '../directory'` give back `..\directory` for
paths aren't special cygwin paths? These relative backslashes are
supported in Windows right now.
Thanks,
Roger
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