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XyzWs Java FAQ:
What is the difference between absolute, relative and canonical path of file or directory?
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What is the difference between absolute, relative and canonical path of file or directory?
The following example shows how there can be many different paths (and absolute paths) to the same file, which all have the exact same canonical path. Thus canonical path is useful if you want to know if two different paths point to the same file or not. import java.io.*;
public class Test {
public static void showPaths(String pathName) throws IOException {
File file = new File(pathName);
System.out.println("path: " + file.getPath());
System.out.println("absolute path: " + file.getAbsolutePath());
System.out.println("canonical path: " + file.getCanonicalPath());
System.out.println();
}
public static void main(String[] s) throws IOException {
File file = new File(new File("test.txt").getAbsolutePath());
String parent = file.getParent();
File parentFile = new File(parent);
String parentName = parentFile.getName();
String grandparent = parentFile.getParent();
file.createNewFile();
showPaths("test.txt");
showPaths("TEST.TXT");
showPaths("." + File.separator + "TEST.TXT");
showPaths(parent
+ File.separator + "."
+ File.separator + "test.txt");
showPaths(grandparent
+ File.separator + parentName
+ File.separator + ".."
+ File.separator + parentName
+ File.separator + "test.txt");
}
}
On window XP and Java 5.0, the results are: path: test.txt absolute path: C:\XyzWs\test.txt canonical path: C:\XyzWs\test.txt path: TEST.TXT absolute path: C:\XyzWs\TEST.TXT canonical path: C:\XyzWs\test.txt path: .\TEST.TXT absolute path: C:\XyzWs\.\TEST.TXT canonical path: C:\XyzWs\test.txt path: C:\XyzWs\.\test.txt absolute path: C:\XyzWs\.\test.txt canonical path: C:\XyzWs\test.txt path: C:\XyzWs\..\XyzWs\test.txt absolute path: C:\XyzWs\..\XyzWs\test.txt canonical path: C:\XyzWs\test.txt More about "Canonical"Canonical path is validated with the File System while Absolute path is still abstract and may not be able to represent any physical path. An IOException is thrown if the path name is not possible (Z:/x:/test.txt). For example, import java.io.*;
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] s) throws IOException {
File file = new File ( "Z:/a,b,b", "a*b*c" );
System.out.print ( "Absolute Path:" );
System.out.println ( file.getAbsolutePath () );
System.out.print ( "Canonical Path:" );
System.out.println ( file.getCanonicalPath () );
}
}
Prints: Absolute Path:Z:\a,b,b\a*b*c Canonical Path:java.io.IOException: Invalid argument at java.io.Win32FileSystem.canonicalize(Native Method) at java.io.File.getCanonicalPath(File.java:437) at Test.main(Test.java:9) Since file systems differ over platforms, FileSystem is an abstract class, and canonicalize() is an abstract method. A canonical path is an absolute path, but how it is expressed is up to the concrete implementation of java.io.FileSystem. You'd need to run the code on two separate systems to see the difference between the two methods, assuming there is one.
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