On 2008-02-01, Giampaolo Rodola' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> Sure seems like a bug to me. On Unix, "/" is an absolute path. >> >> On windows, "/" is relative to the current device. >> >> > If you mean "the current drive letter" it's not actually true >> > since "\ \" is used for that: >> >> > >>> os.getcwd() >> > 'C:\\Python25' >> > >>> os.path.realpath('\\') >> > 'C:\\' >> >> You'll get identical results with "/". > > Didn't know that. And this is another strange thing since Windows > shell does not behave like that: > > C:\Python25>cd / > > C:\Python25>cd \
True, but we're not talking about how Windows' shell (cmd.exe) parses its command line. The Windows system calls (at least at the library level) are perfectly happy with "/" as a directory separator and always have been. MS-DOS system calls before that were also happy with "/" as a directory separator. Back in the early days of MS-DOS, you could even tell command.com to use '-' as an option flag instead of '/', then you could use properly spelled paths at the DOS shell also. [I've read that 32-bit cmd.exe has lost that feature. I don't really know, I always use bash instead.] -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! I just had a NOSE at JOB!! visi.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list