Fs API: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 01:13, 25 December 2012
The Fs API allows you to mess around with the filesystem. All the methods of this API are listed below.
Note: All of these functions except for fs.combine refer solely to absolute paths.
This means that the current working directory, as set by the cd
command or the shell.setDir function, is ignored. Each path name consists of a list of nonempty path components separated by forward slashes, and those path components are taken one by one with the first being contained in the root directory of the computer.
If you need to deal with paths provided by the user that may be absolute or may be relative to the current working directory, use shell.resolve.
Unlike most real-world operating systems, ComputerCraft's absolute path name system does not need to be started with a forward slash ( / ). Making the directory "a/b/c" is the same as making "/a/b/c". Leaving the slashes is just a matter of preference to the coder.
Contents
fs.list
Function fs.list | |
Syntax | fs.list(string path) |
Returns | table list of files and folders in path, which must be a directory |
Description | Returns a list of all the files contained in a directory, in table format |
Examples
Description | Displays a list of all files and folders in the root directory of a computer |
Code |
local FileList = fs.list("") --Table with all the files and directories available for _,file in ipairs( FileList ) do --Loop. Underscore because we don't use the key, ipairs so it's in order print( file ) --Print the file name end --End the loop |
Output | A list of all files and folders in the root directory as a table. Note that fs.list() could also be inserted directly into ipairs() or pairs() |
fs.exists
Function fs.exists | |
Syntax | fs.exists(string path) |
Returns | boolean true if path is an existing file or directory, or false if not |
Description | Checks whether a file or directory exists |
Examples
Description | Checks that the "rom" directory exists |
Code |
print(fs.exists("rom")) |
Output | true |
fs.isDir
Function fs.isDir | |
Syntax | fs.isDir(string path) |
Returns | boolean true if path is an existing directory, or false if not (if it doesn't exist or if it is a regular file) |
Description | Checks whether a directory exists |
Examples
Description | Checks that the "rom" directory is, in fact, a directory |
Code |
print(fs.isDir("rom")) |
Output | true |
fs.isReadOnly
Function fs.isReadOnly | |
Syntax | fs.isReadOnly(string path) |
Returns | boolean false if path can be written to, or true if not |
Description | Checks whether a path can be written to (the path need not exist in order to perform this test) |
Examples
Description | Checks that the "rom" directory is read-only, as its name implies |
Code |
print(fs.isReadOnly("rom")) |
Output | true |
fs.getName
Function fs.getName | |
Syntax | fs.getName(string path) |
Returns | string the last path component of the path, or the string "root" if the path refers to the root directory |
Description | Returns the last path component (forward-slash-separated) component of a path (which need not exist) |
Examples
Description | Gets the last path component of a file |
Code |
print(fs.getName("rom/apis/colors")) |
Output | colors |
fs.getDrive
Function fs.getDrive | |
Syntax | fs.getDrive(string path) |
Returns | string the type of storage medium holding the path, as of ComputerCraft 1.3 one of "rom" or "hdd"[1] |
Description | Returns the storage medium holding a path, or nil if the path does not exist |
Examples
Description | Checks that the standard "startup" file is stored in ROM |
Code |
print(fs.getDrive("rom/startup")) |
Output | rom |
fs.getSize
Function fs.getSize | |
Syntax | fs.getSize(string path) |
Returns | bytes |
Description | Gets the size of a file |
Examples
Description | Get the size of the shell from the ROM and print it |
Code |
print( fs.getSize("/rom/programs/shell") ) |
fs.makeDir
Function fs.makeDir | |
Syntax | fs.makeDir(string path) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Creates a directory (fails if the location already exists as a file; silently does nothing if the location or a parent already exists as a directory; recursively creates directories if a parent is also missing) |
Examples
Description | Create a directory called "efgh" inside a directory called "abcd" ("abcd" need not exist; it will be created) |
Code |
fs.makeDir("abcd/efgh") |
fs.move
Function fs.move | |
Syntax | fs.move(string fromPath, string toPath) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Moves a file or directory to a new location (the parent of the new location must be a directory, toPath must include the target filename and cannot be only a directory to move the file into, and toPath itself must not already exist) |
Examples
Description | Renames a file from "test1" to "test2" and moves it from the root directory into a directory called "mydir" |
Code |
fs.move("test1", "mydir/test2") |
fs.copy
Function fs.copy | |
Syntax | fs.copy(string fromPath, string toPath) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Copies a file or directory to a new location (the parent of the new location must be a directory, toPath must include the target filename and cannot be only a directory to move the file into, and toPath itself must not already exist) |
Examples
Description | Makes a copy of a file "test1" in the root directory, calling it "test2" and storing the copy in a directory called "mydir" |
Code |
fs.copy("test1", "mydir/test2") |
fs.delete
Function fs.delete | |
Syntax | fs.delete(string path) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Deletes a file or directory (a nonexistent target is ignored; a directory will be deleted along with all its contents) |
Examples
Description | Deletes a file or directory called "test1" in the root directory |
Code |
fs.delete("test1") |
fs.combine
Function fs.combine | |
Syntax | fs.combine(string basePath, string localPath) |
Returns | string the combined path |
Description | Combines two paths, such that the new path consists of all the components of localPath inside all the components of basePath (neither path needs to exist; this function only manipulates strings and does not touch the filesystem) |
Examples
Description | Computes the absolute path to a file called "d" inside a directory called "c", where "c" is itself inside a directory "b" which is inside a directory "a" |
Code |
print(fs.combine("a/b", "c/d")) |
Output | a/b/c/d |
Description | An empty first path refers to the root directory, so the second path is returned |
Code |
print(fs.combine("", "c/d")) |
Output | c/d |
Description | An empty second path refers to the first path directly, so the first path is returned |
Code |
print(fs.combine("a/b", "")) |
Output | a/b |
Description | The last two examples make sense combined, returning the empty string (referring to the root directory) |
Code |
print(fs.combine("", "")) |
fs.open
Function fs.open | |
Syntax | fs.open(string path, string mode) |
Returns | table the file handle, or nil if the mode was read-only or the file did not exist |
Description | Opens a file; mode consists of a first character which is one of
"r" to open the file read-only, "w" to open it for writing and remove any existing data, or "a" to open for writing but keep existing data and append any writes to the end of the file, plus optionally the second character "b" to open the file for binary access instead of text access (text mode will perform end-of-line conversions necessary to move text files between Windows, Linux, and Mac OS systems; binary files should not have these conversions applied as they will be corrupted) |
Examples
Description | Creates the file "abcd" and holds a file handle to it |
Code |
h = fs.open("abcd", "w") |
File Handles
A file handle allows access to a file. A file handle is a table; the functions within the table are accessed with the dot operator (not the colon operator, as may be more intuitive!). The examples below assume a file has already been opened and the handle stored in the variable h.
Files opened in text read mode
A file opened in mode "r" (text read mode) exposes the following functions.
Function h.readLine | |
Syntax | h.readLine() |
Returns | string the next line read from the file, with the end-of-line character stripped; or nil if there are no more lines in the file |
Description | Reads the next line from the file |
Function h.readAll | |
Syntax | h.readAll() |
Returns | string the entire rest of the file, with the end-of-line character on the very last line (if present) stripped |
Description | Reads the rest of the text in the file |
Function h.close | |
Syntax | h.close() |
Returns | nil |
Description | Closes the file handle, after which it can no longer be used |
Files opened in text write/append mode
A file opened in mode "w" (text write mode) or "a" (text append mode) exposes the following functions:
Function h.write | |
Syntax | h.write(string data) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Writes a string of characters to the file exactly as they appear in the string data |
Function h.writeLine | |
Syntax | h.writeLine(string data) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Writes a string of characters to the file, then appends an end-of-line character |
Function h.close | |
Syntax | h.close() |
Returns | nil |
Description | Closes the file handle, after which it can no longer be used |
Files opened in binary read mode
A file opened in mode "rb" (binary read mode) exposes the following functions:
Function h.read | |
Syntax | h.read() |
Returns | int the byte read from the file, or nil if there are no more bytes |
Description | Reads a single byte from the file and returns it |
Function h.close | |
Syntax | h.close() |
Returns | nil |
Description | Closes the file handle, after which it can no longer be used |
Files opened in binary write/append mode
A file opened in mode "wb" (binary write mode) or "ab" (binary append mode) exposes the following functions:
Function h.write | |
Syntax | h.write(int byte) |
Returns | nil |
Description | Writes a single byte into the file |
Function h.close | |
Syntax | h.close() |
Returns | nil |
Description | Closes the file handle, after which it can no longer be used |