terminology - Name of a path containing the complete file name? -


For me, there was always a way that "walks to do something", but without "something"

After a piece of bread, like a chicken until it does not hit. But the goal is not part of the path. That's my belief.

Then, Example: C: / EF / Bar = Path. C: /foo/bar/something.html = Path and "Target".

Can anyone tell me what the correct word is here? How do I call such a path along with the file?

"full path"? "The perfect way"? "Path with file name"? (Not accurate! "Path with file name and extension" ... too long way)

Want to know this is a special name for this! :)

Good chicken example ... I think you full path

But

But, it does not matter what the path indicates, it is a directory, file , Tool or otherwise

Normal form of a path, a file name or directory name, specifies a unique location in the file system.

This does not require any extension , because other mechanisms work as a file type.

  1. / foo /bar/file.txt = absolute path
  2. for / foo / bar = directory A complete path
  3. .. from the current directory
  4. ./ file.txt = A relative path to the file, from the current directory (Unix

  5. P> The system either a complete or relative path is a full path or full path is a path that indicates the same location on a file system Or regardless of the joint path. It is usually written in the context of the root directory.

    The path between the files and directories is not drawn with the path that is always a path or path to a directory:

    / a / B / c path c

    is a standard UNIX computer program, when the bassname is given a pathname, it will remove any prefix by the last slash ('/') character and return the result. The basename is described in a single UNIX specification and is mainly used in shell scripts.


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