On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 6:50 PM Barry Scott <ba...@barrys-emacs.org> wrote: > > > > > On 26 May 2020, at 18:01, BlindAnagram <blindanag...@nowhere.com> wrote: > > > > On 26/05/2020 17:09, Stefan Ram wrote: > >> Mats Wichmann <m...@python.org> writes: > >>> an absolute path is one that starts with the pathname separator. > >> > >> The Python Library Reference does not use the term > >> "pathname separator". It uses "directory separator" > >> (os.sep) and "filename separator" ('/' on Unix). > >> > >> On Windows: > >> > >> |>>> import pathlib > >> |>>> import os > >> |>>> pathlib.PureWindowsPath('\\').is_absolute() > >> |False > >> |>>> pathlib.PureWindowsPath(os.sep).is_absolute() > >> |False > >> |>>> pathlib.PureWindowsPath('/').is_absolute() > >> |False > > > > Thanks, that seems to suggest that there is an issue and that I should > > hence submit this as an issue. > > Can you post the a link to the issue please? > > I note that > > >>> pathlib.Path('/').is_absolute() > False > >>> pathlib.Path('/').resolve().is_absolute() > True > >>> > > The resolve() is required and I think should not be required. >
Have a look at the difference between the original Path and the resolved one, and see if there's a difference there. I suspect that resolve() is adding the current drive onto that path and thus making it fully absolute. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list