>Steven D'Aprano wrote: >> Why do you think there's no Path object in the standard library? *wink*
In article <mailman.16.1308239495.1164.python-l...@python.org> Ethan Furman <et...@stoneleaf.us> wrote: >Because I can't find one in either 2.7 nor 3.2, and every reference I've >found has indicated that the other Path contenders were too >all-encompassing. What I think Steven D'Aprano is suggesting here is that the general problem is too hard, and specific solutions too incomplete, to bother with. Your own specific solution might work fine for your case(s), but it is unlikely to work in general. I am not aware of any Python implementations for VMS, CMS, VM, EXEC-8, or other dinosaurs, but it would be ... interesting. Consider a typical VMS "full pathname": DRA0:[SYS0.SYSCOMMON]FILE.TXT;3 The first part is the (literal) disk drive (a la MS-DOS A: or C: but slightly more general). The part in [square brackets] is the directory path. The extension (.txt) is limited to three characters, and the part after the semicolon is the file version number, so you can refer to a backup version. (Typically one would use a "logical name" like SYS$SYSROOT in place of the disk and/or directory-sequence, so as to paper over the overly-rigid syntax.) Compare with an EXEC-8 (now, apparently, OS 2200 -- I guess it IS still out there somewhere) "file" name: QUAL*FILE(cyclenumber) where cycle-numbers are relative, i.e., +0 means "use the current file" while "+1" means "create a new one" and "-1" means "use the first backup". (However, one normally tied external file names to "internal names" before running a program, via the "@USE" statement.) The vile details are still available here: http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/univac/1100/UE-637_1108execUG_1970.pdf (Those of you who have never had to deal with these machines, as I did in the early 1980s, should consider yourselves lucky. :-) ) -- In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Wind River Systems Salt Lake City, UT, USA (40°39.22'N, 111°50.29'W) +1 801 277 2603 email: gmail (figure it out) http://web.torek.net/torek/index.html
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