class IO::Path::QNX
IO::Path pre-loaded with IO::Spec::QNX
is IO::Path
This sub-class of IO::Path
, pre-loaded with IO::Spec::QNX
in the $.SPEC
attribute.
Methods
method new
Same as IO::Path.new
, except :$SPEC
cannot be set and defaults to IO::Spec::QNX
, regardless of the operating system the code is being run on.
method perl
Defined as:
method perl(IO::Path::QNX: --> Str)
Returns a string that, when given passed through EVAL
gives the original invocant back.
IO::Path::QNX.new("foo/bar").perl.say;# OUTPUT: IO::Path::QNX.new("foo/bar", :CWD("/home/camelia"))
Note that this string includes the value of the .CWD
attribute that is set to $*CWD
when the path object was created, by default.
Type Graph
Routines supplied by class IO::Path
IO::Path::QNX inherits from class IO::Path, which provides the following routines:
(IO::Path) method new
Defined as:
multi method new(Str , IO::Spec : = , Str() : = )multi method new(:!, : = '.', : = ''IO::Spec : = , Str() : =)
Creates a new IO::Path
object from a path string (which is being parsed for volume, directory name and basename), or from volume, directory name and basename passed as named arguments.
The path's operation will be performed using :$SPEC
semantics (defaults to current $*SPEC
) and will use :$CWD
as the directory the path is relative to (defaults to $*CWD
).
(IO::Path) method ACCEPTS
Defined as:
multi method ACCEPTS(IO::Path: Cool --> Bool)
Coerces the argument to IO::Path
, if necessary. Returns True
if .absolute
method on both paths returns the same string. NOTE: it's possible for two paths that superficially point to the same resource to NOT smartmatch as True
, if they were constructed differently and were never fully resolved:
say "foo/../bar".IO ~~ "bar".IO # False
The reason is the two paths above may point to different resources when fully resolved (e.g. if foo
is a symlink). Resolve the paths before smartmatching to check they point to same resource:
say "foo/../bar".IO.resolve(:completely) ~~ "bar".IO.resolve(:completely) # True
(IO::Path) method basename
Defined as:
method basename(IO::Path:)
Returns the basename part of the path object, which is the name of the filesystem object itself that is referenced by the path.
"docs/README.pod".IO.basename.say; # OUTPUT: «README.pod»"/tmp/".IO.basename.say; # OUTPUT: «tmp»
Note that in IO::Spec::Win32
semantics, the basename
of a Windows share is \
, not the name of the share itself:
IO::Path::Win32.new('//server/share').basename.say; # OUTPUT: «\»
(IO::Path) method add
Defined as:
method add(IO::Path: Str() --> IO::Path)
Concatenates a path fragment to the invocant and returns the resultant IO::Path
. If adding ../
to paths that end with a file, you may need to call resolve for the resultant path to be accessible by other IO::Path
methods like dir or open. See also sibling and parent.
"foo/bar".IO.mkdir;"foo/bar".IO.add("meow") .resolve.relative.say; # OUTPUT: «foo/bar/meow»"foo/bar".IO.add("/meow") .resolve.relative.say; # OUTPUT: «foo/bar/meow»"foo/bar".IO.add("meow.txt").resolve.relative.say; # OUTPUT: «foo/bar/meow.txt»"foo/bar".IO.add("../meow") .resolve.relative.say; # OUTPUT: «foo/meow»"foo/bar".IO.add("../../") .resolve.relative.say; # OUTPUT: «.»
(IO::Path) method child
Defined as:
method child(IO::Path: Str() --> IO::Path)
Alias for .add
. NOTE: This method has been deprecated as of the 6.d version, and will be removed in the future. For any new code, please use .add
(IO::Path) method cleanup
Defined as:
method cleanup(IO::Path: --> IO::Path)
Returns a new path that is a canonical representation of the invocant path, cleaning up any extraneous path parts:
"foo/./././..////bar".IO.cleanup.say; # OUTPUT: «"foo/../bar".IO»IO::Path::Win32.new("foo/./././..////bar").cleanup.say; "foo\..\bar".IO; # OUTPUT: «"foo\..\bar".IO»
Note that no filesystem access is made. See also resolve
.
(IO::Path) method comb
Defined as:
method comb(IO::Path: |args --> Seq)
Opens the file and processes its contents the same way Str.comb
does, taking the same arguments. Implementations may slurp the file in its entirety when this method is called.
(IO::Path) method split
Defined as:
method split(IO::Path: |args --> Seq)
Opens the file and processes its contents the same way Str.split
does, taking the same arguments. Implementations may slurp the file in its entirety when this method is called.
(IO::Path) method extension
Defined as:
multi method extension(IO::Path: --> Str)multi method extension(IO::Path: Int : --> Str)multi method extension(IO::Path: Range : --> Str)multi method extension(IO::Path: Str , Int :, Str : --> IO::Path)multi method extension(IO::Path: Str , Range :, Str : --> IO::Path)
Returns the extension consisting of $parts
parts (defaults to 1
), where a "part" is defined as a dot followed by possibly-empty string up to the end of the string, or previous part. That is "foo.tar.gz"
has an extension of two parts: first part is "gz"
and second part is "tar"
and calling "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: :2parts
gives "tar.gz"
. If an extension with the specified number of $parts
is not found, returns an empty string.
$parts
can be a Range
, specifying the minimum number of parts and maximum number of parts the extension should have. The routine will attempt to much the most parts it can. If $parts
range's endpoints that are smaller than 0
they'll be treated as 0
; implementations may treat endpoints larger than 2⁶³-1
as 2⁶³-1
. Ranges with NaN
or Str
endpoints will cause an exception to be thrown.
If $subst
is provided, the extension will be instead replaced with $subst
and a new IO::Path
object will be returned. It will be joined to the file's name with $joiner
, which defaults to an empty string when $subst
is an empty string and to "."
when $subst
is not empty. Note: if as the result of replacement the basename
of the path ends up being empty, it will be assumed to be .
(a single dot).
# Getting an extension:say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension; # OUTPUT: «gz»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: :2parts; # OUTPUT: «tar.gz»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: :parts(^5); # OUTPUT: «tar.gz»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: :parts(0..1); # OUTPUT: «gz»# Replacing an extensionsay "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: ''; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP'; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar.ZIP".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :0parts; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar.gz.ZIP".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :2parts; # OUTPUT: «"foo.ZIP".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :parts(^5); # OUTPUT: «"foo.ZIP".IO»# Replacing an extension using non-standard joiner:say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: '', :joiner<_>; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar_".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :joiner<_>; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar_ZIP".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :joiner<_>,:2parts; # OUTPUT: «"foo_ZIP".IO»say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :joiner<_>,:parts(^5); # OUTPUT: «"foo_ZIP".IO»# EDGE CASES:# There is no 5-part extension, so returned value is an empty stringsay "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: :5parts; # OUTPUT: «»# There is no 5-part extension, so we replaced nothing:say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :5parts; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar.gz".IO»# Replacing a 0-part extension is just appending:say "foo.tar.gz".IO.extension: 'ZIP', :0parts; # OUTPUT: «"foo.tar.gz.ZIP".IO»# Replace 1-part of the extension, using '.' joinersay "...".IO.extension: 'tar'; # OUTPUT: «"...tar".IO»# Replace 1-part of the extension, using empty string joinersay "...".IO.extension: 'tar', :joiner(''); # OUTPUT: «"..tar".IO»# Remove 1-part extension; results in empty basename, so result is ".".IOsay ".".IO.extension: ''; # OUTPUT: «".".IO»
(IO::Path) method dirname
Defined as:
method dirname(IO::Path:)
Returns the directory name portion of the path object. That is, it returns the path excluding the volume and the base name. Unless the dirname consist of only the directory separator (i.e. it's the top directory), the trailing directory separator will not be included in the return value.
say IO::Path.new("/home/camelia/myfile.p6").dirname; # OUTPUT: «/home/camelia»say IO::Path::Win32.new("C:/home/camelia").dirname; # OUTPUT: «/home»say IO::Path.new("/home").dirname; # OUTPUT: «/»
(IO::Path) method volume
Defined as:
method volume(IO::Path:)
Returns the volume portion of the path object. On Unix system, this is always the empty string.
say IO::Path::Win32.new("C:\\Windows\\registry.ini").volume; # OUTPUT: «C:»
(IO::Path) method parts
Defined as:
method parts(IO::Path: --> Map)
Returns a Map with the keys volume
, dirname
, basename
whose values are the same as available via methods .volume
, .dirname
, and .basename
respectively.
say IO::Path::Win32.new("C:/rakudo/perl6.bat").parts.perl;# OUTPUT: «Map.new((:basename("perl6.bat"),:dirname("/rakudo"),:volume("C:")))»
(IO::Path) method perl
Defined as:
method perl(IO::Path: --> Str)
Returns a string that, when given passed through EVAL
gives the original invocant back.
"foo/bar".IO.perl.say;# OUTPUT: IO::Path.new("foo/bar", :SPEC(IO::Spec::Unix), :CWD("/home/camelia"))
Note that this string includes the value of the .CWD
attribute that is set to $*CWD
when the path object was created, by default.
(IO::Path) method gist
Defined as:
method gist(IO::Path: --> Str)
Returns a string, part of which contains either the value of .absolute
(if path is absolute) or .path
. Note that no escaping of special characters is made, so e.g. "\b"
means a path contains a backslash and letter "b", not a backspace.
say "foo/bar".IO; # OUTPUT: «"foo/bar".IO»say IO::Path::Win32.new: 「C:\foo/bar\」; # OUTPUT: «"C:\foo/bar\".IO»
(IO::Path) method Str
Defined as:
method Str(IO::Path: --> Str)
Alias for IO::Path.path
. In particular, note that default stringification of an IO::Path
does NOT use the value of $.CWD
attribute. To stringify while retaining full path information use .absolute
or .relative
methods.
(IO::Path) method succ
Defined as:
method succ(IO::Path: --> IO::Path)
Returns a new IO::Path constructed from the invocant, with .basename
changed by calling Str.succ
on it.
"foo/file02.txt".IO.succ.say; # OUTPUT: «"foo/file03.txt".IO»
(IO::Path) method open
Defined as:
method open(IO::Path: *)
Opens the path as a file; the named options control the mode, and are the same as the open function accepts.
(IO::Path) method pred
Defined as:
method pred(IO::Path: --> IO::Path)
Returns a new IO::Path constructed from the invocant, with .basename
changed by calling Str.pred
on it.
"foo/file02.txt".IO.pred.say; # OUTPUT: «"foo/file01.txt".IO»
(IO::Path) method watch
Defined as:
method watch(IO::Path: --> Supply)
Equivalent to calling IO::Notification.watch-path with the invocant as the argument.
(IO::Path) method is-absolute
Defined as:
method is-absolute(IO::Path: --> Bool)
Returns True
if the path is an absolute path, and False
otherwise.
"/foo".IO.is-absolute.say; # OUTPUT: «True»"bars".IO.is-absolute.say; # OUTPUT: «False»
Note that on Windows a path that starts with a slash or backslash is still considered absolute even if no volume was given, as it is absolute for that particular volume:
IO::Path::Win32.new("/foo" ).is-absolute.say; # OUTPUT: «True»IO::Path::Win32.new("C:/foo").is-absolute.say; # OUTPUT: «True»IO::Path::Win32.new("C:foo" ).is-absolute.say; # OUTPUT: «False»
(IO::Path) method is-relative
Defined as:
method is-relative(IO::Path: --> Bool)
Returns True
if the path is a relative path, and False
otherwise. Windows caveats for .is-absolute
apply.
(IO::Path) method absolute
Defined as:
multi method absolute(IO::Path: --> Str)multi method absolute(IO::Path: --> Str)
Returns a new Str
object that is an absolute path. If the invocant is not already an absolute path, it is first made absolute using $base
as base, if it is provided, or the .CWD
attribute the object was created with if it is not.
(IO::Path) method relative
Defined as:
method relative(IO::Path: = --> Str)
Returns a new Str
object with the path relative to the $base
. If $base
is not provided, $*CWD
is used in its place. If the invocant is not an absolute path, it's first made to be absolute using the .CWD
attribute the object was created with, and then is made relative to $base
.
(IO::Path) method parent
Defined as:
multi method parent(IO::Path:)multi method parent(IO::Path: UInt )
Returns the parent path of the invocant. Note that no actual filesystem access is made, so the returned parent is physical and not the logical parent of symlinked directories.
'/etc/foo'.IO.parent.say; # OUTPUT: «"/etc".IO»'/etc/..' .IO.parent.say; # OUTPUT: «"/etc".IO»'/etc/../'.IO.parent.say; # OUTPUT: «"/etc".IO»'./' .IO.parent.say; # OUTPUT: «"..".IO»'foo' .IO.parent.say; # OUTPUT: «".".IO»'/' .IO.parent.say; # OUTPUT: «"/".IO»IO::Path::Win32.new('C:/').parent.say; # OUTPUT: «"C:/".IO»
If $level
is specified, the call is equivalent to calling .parent()
$level
times:
say "/etc/foo".IO.parent(2) eqv "/etc/foo".IO.parent.parent; # OUTPUT: «True»
(IO::Path) method resolve
Defined as:
method resolve(IO::Path: : --> IO::Path)
Returns a new IO::Path
object with all symbolic links and references to the parent directory (..
) resolved. This means that the filesystem is examined for each directory in the path, and any symlinks found are followed.
# bar is a symlink pointing to "/baz"my = "foo/./bar/..".IO.resolve; # now "/" (the parent of "/baz")
If :$completely
, which defaults to False
, is set to a true value, the method will fail
with X::IO::Resolve
if it cannot completely resolve the path, otherwise, it will resolve as much as possible, and will merely perform cleanup
of the rest of the path. The last part of the path does NOT have to exist to :$completely
resolve the path.
NOTE: Currently (April 2017) this method doesn't work correctly on all platforms, e.g. Windows, since it assumes POSIX semantics.
(IO::Path) routine dir
Defined as:
sub dir(Cool = '.', Mu : = none('.', '..'))method dir(IO::Path: Mu : = none('.', '..'))
Returns the contents of a directory as a lazy list of IO::Path
objects representing relative paths, filtered by smartmatching their names (as strings) against the :test
parameter.
Since the tests are performed against Str
arguments, not IO
, the tests are executed in the $*CWD
, instead of the target directory. When testing against file test operators, this won't work:
dir('mydir', test => )
while this will:
dir('mydir', test => )
NOTE: a dir
call opens a directory for reading, which counts towards maximum per-process open files for your program. Be sure to exhaust returned Seq before doing something like recursively performing more dir
calls. You can exhaust it by assigning to a @-
sigiled variable or simply looping over it. Note how examples below push further dirs to look through into an Array, rather than immediately calling dir
on them. See also IO::Dir
module that gives you finer control over closing dir handles.
Examples:
# To iterate over the contents of the current directory:for dir() -># As before, but include even '.' and '..' which are filtered out by# the default :test matcher:for dir(test => *) -># To get the names of all .jpg and .jpeg files in ~/Downloads:my = .dir: test => /:i '.' jpe?g $/;
An example program that lists all files and directories recursively:
sub MAIN( = '.')
A lazy way to find the first three files ending in ".p6" recursively starting from the current directory:
my = '.'.IO;my = gather while.put for [^3];
(IO::Path) method e
Defined as:
method e(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists.
(IO::Path) method d
Defined as:
method d(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is a directory. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method f
Defined as:
method f(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is a file. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method s
Defined as:
method s(--> Int)
Returns the file size in bytes. May be called on paths that are directories, in which case the reported size is dependent on the operating system. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
say .IO.s; # OUTPUT : «467»
(IO::Path) method l
Defined as:
method l(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is a symlink. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method r
Defined as:
method r(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is accessible. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method w
Defined as:
method w(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is writable. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method rw
Defined as:
method rw(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is readable and writable. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method x
Defined as:
method x(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is executable. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method rwx
Defined as:
method rwx(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and is executable, readable, and writable. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method z
Defined as:
method z(--> Bool)
Returns True
if the invocant is a path that exists and has size of 0
. May be called on paths that are directories, in which case the reported file size (and thus the result of this method) is dependent on the operating system. The method will fail
with X::IO::DoesNotExist
if the path points to a non-existent filesystem entity.
(IO::Path) method sibling
Defined as:
method sibling(IO::Path: Str() --> IO::Path)
Allows to reference a sibling file or directory. Returns a new IO::Path
based on the invocant, with the .basename
changed to $sibling
. The $sibling
is allowed to be a multi-part path fragment; see also .add
.
say '.bashrc'.IO.sibling: '.bash_aliases'; # OUTPUT: «.bash_aliases".IO»say '/home/camelia/.bashrc'.IO.sibling: '.bash_aliases';# OUTPUT: «/home/camelia/.bash_aliases".IO»say '/foo/' .IO.sibling: 'bar'; # OUTPUT: «/bar".IO»say '/foo/.'.IO.sibling: 'bar'; # OUTPUT: «/foo/bar".IO»
(IO::Path) method words
Defined as:
method words(IO::Path: : = True, : = 'utf8', : = ["\x0A", "\r\n"], |c --> Seq)
Opens the invocant and returns its words.
The behavior is equivalent to opening the file specified by the invocant, forwarding the :$chomp
, :$enc
, and :$nl-in
arguments to IO::Handle.open
, then calling IO::Handle.words
on that handle, forwarding any of the remaining arguments to that method, and returning the resultant Seq.
NOTE: words are lazily read. The handle used under the hood is not closed until the returned Seq is fully reified, and this could lead to leaking open filehandles. It is possible to avoid leaking open filehandles using the $limit
argument to cut down the Seq
of words to be generated.
my := bag 'my-file.txt'.IO.words;say "Most common words: ", .sort(-*.value).head: 5;
(IO::Path) method lines
Defined as:
method lines(IO::Path: : = True, : = 'utf8', : = ["\x0A", "\r\n"], |c --> Seq)
Opens the invocant and returns its lines.
The behavior is equivalent to opening the file specified by the invocant, forwarding the :$chomp
, :$enc
, and :$nl-in
arguments to IO::Handle.open
, then calling IO::Handle.lines
on that handle, forwarding any of the remaining arguments to that method, and returning the resultant Seq.
NOTE: the lines are ready lazily and the handle used under the hood won't get closed until the returned Seq is fully reified, so ensure it is, or you'll be leaking open filehandles. (TIP: use the $limit
argument)
say "The file contains ",'50GB-file'.IO.lines.grep(*.contains: 'Perl').elems," lines that mention Perl";# OUTPUT: «The file contains 72 lines that mention Perl»
(IO::Path) routine slurp
Defined as:
multi method slurp(IO::Path: :, :)
Read all of the file's content and return it as either Buf, if :$bin
is True
, or if not, as Str decoded with :$enc
encoding, which defaults to utf8
. File will be closed afterwards. See &open
for valid values for :$enc
.
(IO::Path) method spurt
Defined as:
method spurt(IO::Path: , :, :, :)
Opens the file path for writing, and writes all of the $data
into it. File will be closed, afterwards. Will fail
if it cannot succeed for any reason. The $data
can be any Cool
type or any Blob
type. Arguments are as follows:
:$enc
— character encoding of the data. Takes same values as :$enc
in IO::Handle.open
. Defaults to utf8
. Ignored if $data
is a Blob
.
:$append
— open the file in append
mode, preserving existing contents, and appending data to the end of the file.
:$createonly
— fail
if the file already exists.
(IO::Path) method chdir
Defined as:
multi method chdir(IO::Path: Str() , : = True, :, :, :)
DEPRECATION NOTICE: this method will be deprecated in 6.d
language and removed in 6.e
. Do not use it for new code. Instead, create a new path or use add
method. For altering current working directory see &chdir
and &*chdir
subroutines.
Contrary to the name, the .chdir
method does not change any directories, but merely concatenates the given $path
to the invocant and returns the resultant IO::Path
. Optional file tests can be performed by providing :d
, :r
, :w
, or :x
Bool
named arguments; when set to True
, they'll perform .d
, .r
, .w
, and .x
tests respectively. By default, only :d
is set to True
.
(IO::Path) sub mkdir
Defined as:
method mkdir(IO::Path: Int() = 0o777 --> IO::Path)
Creates a new directory, including its parent directories, as needed (similar to *nix utility mkdir
with -p
option). That is, mkdir "foo/bar/ber/meow"
will create foo
, foo/bar
, and foo/bar/ber
directories as well if they do not exist.
Returns the IO::Path object pointing to the newly created directory on success; fails with X::IO::Mkdir if directory cannot be created.
See also mode
for explanation and valid values for $mode
.
(IO::Path) routine rmdir
Defined as:
sub rmdir(* --> List)method rmdir(IO::Path: --> True)
Remove the invocant, or in sub form, all of the provided directories in the given list, which can contain any Cool object. Only works on empty directories.
Method form returns True
on success and throws an exception of type X::IO::Rmdir
if the directory cannot be removed (e.g. the directory is not empty, or the path is not a directory). Subroutine form returns a list of directories that were successfully deleted.
To delete non-empty directory, see rmtree in File::Directory::Tree
module.
(IO::Path) method chmod
Defined as:
method chmod(IO::Path: Int() --> Bool)
Changes the POSIX permissions of a file or directory to $mode
. Returns True
on success; on failure, fails with X::IO::Chmod.
The mode is expected as an integer following the standard numeric notation, and is best written as an octal number:
'myfile'.IO.chmod(0o444); # make a file read-only'somedir'.IO.chmod(0o777); # set 0777 permissions on a directory
Make sure you don't accidentally pass the intended octal digits as a decimal number (or string containing a decimal number):
'myfile'.IO.chmod: '0444'; # BAD!!! (interpreted as mode 0o674)'myfile'.IO.chmod: '0o444'; # OK (an octal in a string)'myfile'.IO.chmod: 0o444; # Also OK (an octal literal)
(IO::Path) routine rename
Defined as:
method rename(IO::Path: IO() , : = False --> Bool)sub rename(IO() , IO() , : = False --> Bool)
Renames a file or directory. Returns True
on success; fails with X::IO::Rename if :$createonly
is True
and the $to
path already exists or if the operation failed for some other reason.
Note: some renames will always fail, such as when the new name is on a different storage device. See also: move
.
(IO::Path) routine copy
Defined as:
method copy(IO::Path: IO() , : --> Bool)sub copy(IO() , IO() , : --> Bool)
Copies a file. Returns True
on success; fails with X::IO::Copy if :$createonly
is True
and the $to
path already exists or if the operation failed for some other reason, such as when $to
and $from
are the same file.
(IO::Path) routine move
Defined as:
method move(IO::Path: IO() , : --> Bool)sub move(IO() , IO() , : --> Bool)
Copies a file and then removes the original. If removal fails, it's possible to end up with two copies of the file. Returns True
on success; fails with X::IO::Move if :$createonly
is True
and the $to
path already exists or if the operation failed for some other reason, such as when $to
and $from
are the same file.
To avoid copying, you can use rename
, if the files are on the same storage device. It also works with directories, while move
does not.
(IO::Path) method Numeric
Defined as:
method Numeric(IO::Path: --> Numeric)
Coerces .basename
to Numeric. Fails with X::Str::Numeric
if base name is not numerical.
(IO::Path) method Int
Defined as:
method Int(IO::Path: --> Int)
Coerces .basename
to Int. Fails with X::Str::Numeric
if base name is not numerical.
(IO::Path) routine symlink
Defined as:
method symlink(IO::Path : IO() --> Bool)sub symlink( IO() , IO() --> Bool)
Create a new symbolic link $link
to existing $target
. Returns True
on success; fails with X::IO::Symlink if the symbolic link could not be created. If $target
does not exist, creates a dangling symbolic link. To create a hard link, see link
.
Note: on Windows, creation of symbolic links may require escalated privileges.
(IO::Path) routine link
Defined as:
method link(IO::Path : IO() --> Bool)sub link( IO() , IO() --> Bool)
Create a new hard link $link
to existing $target
. Returns True
on success; fails with X::IO::Link if the hard link could not be created. To create a symbolic link, see symlink
.
(IO::Path) routine unlink
Defined as:
method unlink(IO::Path: --> True)sub unlink(* --> List)
Delete all specified ordinary files, links, or symbolic links for which there are privileges to do so. See rmdir to delete directories.
The subroutine form returns the names of all the files in the list, excluding those for which the filesystem raised some error; since trying to delete a file that does not exist does not raise any error at that level, this list will include the names of the files in the list that do not exist.
The method form returns True
on success, or fails with X::IO::Unlink if the operation could not be completed. If the file to be deleted does not exist, the routine treats it as success.
'foo.txt'.IO.open(:w).close;'bar'.IO.mkdir;say unlink <foo.txt bar not-there.txt>; # OUTPUT: «[foo.txt not-there.txt]»# `bar` is not in output because it failed to delete (it's a directory)# `not-there.txt` is present. It never existed, so that's deemed a success.# Method form `fail`s:say .exception.message without 'bar'.IO.unlink;# OUTPUT: «Failed to remove the file […] illegal operation on a directory»
(IO::Path) method IO
Defined as:
method IO(IO::Path: --> IO::Path)
Returns the invocant.
(IO::Path) method SPEC
Defined as:
method SPEC(IO::Path: --> IO::Spec)
Returns the IO::Spec object that was (implicitly) specified at object creation time.
my = IO::Path.new("/bin/bash");say .SPEC; # OUTPUT: «(Unix)»say .SPEC.dir-sep; # OUTPUT: «/»
(IO::Path) method modified
Returns an Instant
object indicating when the content of the file was last modified. Compare with changed.
say "path/to/file".IO.modified; # Instant:1424089165say "path/to/file".IO.modified.DateTime; # 2015-02-16T12:18:50Z
(IO::Path) method accessed
Return an Instant object representing the timestamp when the file was last accessed. Note: depending on how the filesystem was mounted, the last accessed time may not update on each access to the file, but only on the first access after modifications.
say "path/to/file".IO.accessed; # Instant:1424353577say "path/to/file".IO.accessed.DateTime; # 2015-02-19T13:45:42Z
(IO::Path) method changed
Returns an Instant
object indicating the metadata of the file or directory was last changed (e.g. permissions, or files created/deleted in directory). Compare with modified.
say "path/to/file".IO.changed; # Instant:1424089165say "path/to/file".IO.changed.DateTime; # 2015-02-16T12:18:50Z
(IO::Path) method mode
Return an IntStr object representing the POSIX permissions of a file. The Str
part of the result is the octal representation of the file permission, like the form accepted by the chmod(1)
utility.
say ~"path/to/file".IO.mode; # e.g. '0644'say +"path/to/file".IO.mode; # e.g. 420, where sprintf('%04o', 420) eq '0644'
The result of this can be used in the other methods that take a mode as an argument.
"path/to/file1".IO.chmod("path/to/file2".IO.mode); # will change the# permissions of file1# to be the same as file2
Routines supplied by class Cool
IO::Path::QNX inherits from class Cool, which provides the following routines:
(Cool) routine abs
Defined as:
sub abs(Numeric() )method abs()
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the argument) to Numeric and returns the absolute value (that is, a non-negative number).
say (-2).abs; # OUTPUT: «2»say abs "6+8i"; # OUTPUT: «10»
(Cool) method conj
Defined as:
method conj()
Coerces the invocant to Numeric and returns the complex conjugate (that is, the number with the sign of the imaginary part negated).
say (1+2i).conj; # OUTPUT: «1-2i»
(Cool) routine EVAL
Defined as:
method EVAL(*)
It calls the subroutine form with the invocant as the first argument, $code
, passing along named args, if any.
(Cool) routine sqrt
Defined as:
sub sqrt(Numeric(Cool) )method sqrt()
Coerces the invocant to Numeric (or in the sub form, the argument) and returns the square root, that is, a non-negative number that, when multiplied with itself, produces the original number.
say 4.sqrt; # OUTPUT: «2»say sqrt(2); # OUTPUT: «1.4142135623731»
(Cool) method sign
Defined as:
method sign()
Coerces the invocant to Numeric and returns its sign, that is, 0 if the number is 0, 1 for positive and -1 for negative values.
say 6.sign; # OUTPUT: «1»say (-6).sign; # OUTPUT: «-1»say "0".sign; # OUTPUT: «0»
(Cool) method rand
Defined as:
method rand()
Coerces the invocant to Num and returns a pseudo-random value between zero and the number.
say 1e5.rand; # OUTPUT: «33128.495184283»
(Cool) routine sin
Defined as:
sub sin(Numeric(Cool))method sin()
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians, returns its sine.
say sin(0); # OUTPUT: «0»say sin(pi/4); # OUTPUT: «0.707106781186547»say sin(pi/2); # OUTPUT: «1»
Note that Perl 6 is no computer algebra system, so sin(pi)
typically does not produce an exact 0, but rather a very small floating-point number.
(Cool) routine asin
Defined as:
sub asin(Numeric(Cool))method asin()
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the argument) to Numeric, and returns its arc-sine in radians.
say 0.1.asin; # OUTPUT: «0.10016742116156»say asin(0.1); # OUTPUT: «0.10016742116156»
(Cool) routine cos
Defined as:
sub cos(Numeric(Cool))method cos()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, the argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians, returns its cosine.
say 0.cos; # OUTPUT: «1»say pi.cos; # OUTPUT: «-1»say cos(pi/2); # OUTPUT: «6.12323399573677e-17»
(Cool) routine acos
Defined as:
sub acos(Numeric(Cool))method acos()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, the argument) to Numeric, and returns its arc-cosine in radians.
say 1.acos; # OUTPUT: «0»say acos(-1); # OUTPUT: «3.14159265358979»
(Cool) routine tan
Defined as:
sub tan(Numeric(Cool))method tan()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, the argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians, returns its tangent.
say tan(3); # OUTPUT: «-0.142546543074278»say 3.tan; # OUTPUT: «-0.142546543074278»
(Cool) routine atan
Defined as:
sub atan(Numeric(Cool))method atan()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, the argument) to Numeric, and returns its arc-tangent in radians.
say atan(3); # OUTPUT: «1.24904577239825»say 3.atan; # OUTPUT: «1.24904577239825»
(Cool) routine atan2
Defined as:
method atan2( = 1e0)
Coerces self and argument to Numeric, using them to compute the two-argument arc-tangent in radians.
say 3.atan2; # OUTPUT: «1.24904577239825»say ⅔.atan2(⅓); # OUTPUT: «1.1071487177940904»
The first argument defaults to 1, so in the first case the function will return the angle θ in radians between a vector that goes from origin to the point (3, 1) and the x axis.
(Cool) routine sec
Defined as:
sub sec(Numeric(Cool))method sec()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians, returns its secant, that is, the reciprocal of its cosine.
say 45.sec; # OUTPUT: «1.90359440740442»say sec(45); # OUTPUT: «1.90359440740442»
(Cool) routine asec
Defined as:
sub asec(Numeric(Cool))method asec()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its arc-secant in radians.
say 1.asec; # OUTPUT: «0»say sqrt(2).asec; # OUTPUT: «0.785398163397448»
(Cool) routine cosec
Defined as:
sub cosec(Numeric(Cool))method cosec()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians, returns its cosecant, that is, the reciprocal of its sine.
say 0.45.cosec; # OUTPUT: «2.29903273150897»say cosec(0.45); # OUTPUT: «2.29903273150897»
(Cool) routine acosec
Defined as:
sub acosec(Numeric(Cool))method acosec()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its arc-cosecant in radians.
say 45.acosec; # OUTPUT: «0.0222240516182672»say acosec(45) # OUTPUT: «0.0222240516182672»
(Cool) routine cotan
Defined as:
sub cotan(Numeric(Cool))method cotan()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians, returns its cotangent, that is, the reciprocal of its tangent.
say 45.cotan; # OUTPUT: «0.617369623783555»say cotan(45); # OUTPUT: «0.617369623783555»
(Cool) routine acotan
Defined as:
sub acotan(Numeric(Cool))method acotan()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its arc-cotangent in radians.
say 45.acotan; # OUTPUT: «0.0222185653267191»say acotan(45) # OUTPUT: «0.0222185653267191»
(Cool) routine sinh
Defined as:
sub sinh(Numeric(Cool))method sinh()
Coerces the invocant (or in method form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Sine hyperbolicus.
say 1.sinh; # OUTPUT: «1.1752011936438»say sinh(1); # OUTPUT: «1.1752011936438»
(Cool) routine asinh
Defined as:
sub asinh(Numeric(Cool))method asinh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Inverse Sine hyperbolicus.
say 1.asinh; # OUTPUT: «0.881373587019543»say asinh(1); # OUTPUT: «0.881373587019543»
(Cool) routine cosh
Defined as:
sub cosh(Numeric(Cool))method cosh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Cosine hyperbolicus.
say cosh(0.5); # OUTPUT: «1.12762596520638»
(Cool) routine acosh
Defined as:
sub acosh(Numeric(Cool))method acosh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Inverse Cosine hyperbolicus.
say acosh(45); # OUTPUT: «4.4996861906715»
(Cool) routine tanh
Defined as:
sub tanh(Numeric(Cool))method tanh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, interprets it as radians and returns its Tangent hyperbolicus.
say tanh(0.5); # OUTPUT: «0.46211715726001»say tanh(atanh(0.5)); # OUTPUT: «0.5»
(Cool) routine atanh
Defined as:
sub atanh(Numeric(Cool))method atanh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Inverse tangent hyperbolicus.
say atanh(0.5); # OUTPUT: «0.549306144334055»
(Cool) routine sech
Defined as:
sub sech(Numeric(Cool))method sech()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Secant hyperbolicus.
say 0.sech; # OUTPUT: «1»
(Cool) routine asech
Defined as:
sub asech(Numeric(Cool))method asech()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Inverse hyperbolic secant.
say 0.8.asech; # OUTPUT: «0.693147180559945»
(Cool) routine cosech
Defined as:
sub cosech(Numeric(Cool))method cosech()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Hyperbolic cosecant.
say cosech(pi/2); # OUTPUT: «0.434537208094696»
(Cool) routine acosech
Defined as:
sub acosech(Numeric(Cool))method acosech()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Inverse hyperbolic cosecant.
say acosech(4.5); # OUTPUT: «0.220432720979802»
(Cool) routine cotanh
Defined as:
sub cotanh(Numeric(Cool))method cotanh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Hyperbolic cotangent.
say cotanh(pi); # OUTPUT: «1.00374187319732»
(Cool) routine acotanh
Defined as:
sub acotanh(Numeric(Cool))method acotanh()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns its Inverse hyperbolic cotangent.
say acotanh(2.5); # OUTPUT: «0.423648930193602»
(Cool) routine cis
Defined as:
sub cis(Numeric(Cool))method cis()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and returns cos(argument) + i*sin(argument).
say cis(pi/4); # OUTPUT: «0.707106781186548+0.707106781186547i»
(Cool) routine log
Defined as:
multi sub log(Numeric(Cool) , Numeric(Cool) ?)multi method log(Cool: Cool ?)
Coerces the arguments (including the invocant in the method form) to Numeric, and returns its Logarithm to base $base
, or to base e
(Euler's Number) if no base was supplied (Natural logarithm). Returns NaN
if $base
is negative. Throws an exception if $base
is 1
.
say (e*e).log; # OUTPUT: «2»
(Cool) routine log10
Defined as:
multi sub log10(Cool(Numeric))multi method log10()
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the invocant) to Numeric, and returns its Logarithm to base 10, that is, a number that approximately produces the original number when raised to the power of 10. Returns NaN
for negative arguments and -Inf
for 0
.
say log10(1001); # OUTPUT: «3.00043407747932»
(Cool) routine exp
Defined as:
multi sub exp(Cool , Cool ?)multi method exp(Cool: Cool ?)
Coerces the arguments (including the invocant in the method from) to Numeric, and returns $base
raised to the power of the first number. If no $base
is supplied, e
(Euler's Number) is used.
say 0.exp; # OUTPUT: «1»say 1.exp; # OUTPUT: «2.71828182845905»say 10.exp; # OUTPUT: «22026.4657948067»
(Cool) method unpolar
Defined as:
method unpolar(Numeric(Cool))
Coerces the arguments (including the invocant in the method form) to Numeric, and returns a complex number from the given polar coordinates. The invocant (or the first argument in sub form) is the magnitude while the argument (i.e. the second argument in sub form) is the angle. The angle is assumed to be in radians.
say sqrt(2).unpolar(pi/4); # OUTPUT: «1+1i»
(Cool) routine round
Defined as:
multi sub round(Numeric(Cool))multi method round(Cool: = 1)
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and rounds it to the unit of $unit
. If $unit
is 1, rounds to the nearest integer.
say 1.7.round; # OUTPUT: «2»say 1.07.round(0.1); # OUTPUT: «1.1»say 21.round(10); # OUTPUT: «20»
Always rounds up if the number is at mid-point:
say (−.5 ).round; # OUTPUT: «0»say ( .5 ).round; # OUTPUT: «1»say (−.55).round(.1); # OUTPUT: «-0.5»say ( .55).round(.1); # OUTPUT: «0.6»
Pay attention to types when using this method, as ending up with the wrong type may affect the precision you seek to achieve. For Real types, the type of the result is the type of the argument (Complex argument gets coerced to Real, ending up a Num). If rounding a Complex, the result is Complex as well, regardless of the type of the argument.
9930972392403501.round(1) .perl.say; # OUTPUT: «9930972392403501»9930972392403501.round(1e0) .perl.say; # OUTPUT: «9.9309723924035e+15»9930972392403501.round(1e0).Int.perl.say; # OUTPUT: «9930972392403500»
(Cool) routine floor
Defined as:
multi sub floor(Numeric(Cool))multi method floor
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and rounds it downwards to the nearest integer.
say "1.99".floor; # OUTPUT: «1»say "-1.9".floor; # OUTPUT: «-2»say 0.floor; # OUTPUT: «0»
(Cool) method fmt
Defined as:
method fmt( = '%s')
Uses $format
to return a formatted representation of the invocant; equivalent to calling sprintf with $format
as format and the invocant as the second argument. The $format
will be coerced to Stringy and defaults to '%s'
.
For more information about formats strings, see sprintf.
say 11.fmt('This Int equals %03d'); # OUTPUT: «This Int equals 011»say '16'.fmt('Hexadecimal %x'); # OUTPUT: «Hexadecimal 10»
(Cool) routine ceiling
Defined as:
multi sub ceiling(Numeric(Cool))multi method ceiling
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and rounds it upwards to the nearest integer.
say "1".ceiling; # OUTPUT: «1»say "-0.9".ceiling; # OUTPUT: «0»say "42.1".ceiling; # OUTPUT: «43»
(Cool) routine truncate
Defined as:
multi sub truncate(Numeric(Cool))multi method truncate()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Numeric, and rounds it towards zero.
say 1.2.truncate; # OUTPUT: «1»say truncate -1.2; # OUTPUT: «-1»
(Cool) routine ord
Defined as:
sub ord(Str(Cool))method ord()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the Unicode code point number of the first code point.
say 'a'.ord; # OUTPUT: «97»
The inverse operation is chr.
Mnemonic: returns an ordinal number
(Cool) method path
Defined as:
method path()
DEPRECATED. It's been deprecated as of the 6.d version. Will be removed in the next ones.
Stringifies the invocant and converts it to IO::Path object. Use the .IO method
instead.
(Cool) routine chr
Defined as:
sub chr(Int(Cool))method chr()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Int, interprets it as a Unicode code points, and returns a string made of that code point.
say '65'.chr; # OUTPUT: «A»
The inverse operation is ord.
Mnemonic: turns an integer into a character.
(Cool) routine chars
Defined as:
multi sub chars(Cool )multi sub chars(Str )multi sub chars(str --> int)method chars(--> Int)
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the number of characters in the string. Please note that on the JVM, you currently get codepoints instead of graphemes.
say 'møp'.chars; # OUTPUT: «3»say 'ã̷̠̬̊'.chars; # OUTPUT: «1»say '👨👩👧👦🏿'.chars; # OUTPUT: «1»
If the string is native, the number of chars will be also returned as a native int
.
Graphemes are user visible characters. That is, this is what the user thinks of as a “character”.
Graphemes can contain more than one codepoint. Typically the number of graphemes and codepoints differs when Prepend
or Extend
characters are involved (also known as Combining characters), but there are many other cases when this may happen. Another example is \c[ZWJ]
(Zero-width joiner).
You can check Grapheme_Cluster_Break
property of a character in order to see how it is going to behave:
say ‘ã̷̠̬̊’.uniprops(‘Grapheme_Cluster_Break’); # OUTPUT: «(Other Extend Extend Extend Extend)»say ‘👨👩👧👦🏿’.uniprops(‘Grapheme_Cluster_Break’); # OUTPUT: «(E_Base_GAZ ZWJ E_Base_GAZ ZWJ E_Base_GAZ ZWJ E_Base_GAZ E_Modifier)»
You can read more about graphemes in the Unicode Standard, which Perl 6 tightly follows, using a method called NFG, normal form graphemes for efficiently representing them.
(Cool) routine codes
Defined as:
sub codes(Str(Cool))method codes()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the number of Unicode code points.
say 'møp'.codes; # OUTPUT: «3»
The same result will be obtained with
say +'møp'.ords; # OUTPUT: «3»
ords first obtains the actual codepoints, so there might be a difference in speed.
(Cool) routine flip
Defined as:
sub flip(Cool --> Str)method flip()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns a reversed version.
say 421.flip; # OUTPUT: «124»
(Cool) routine trim
Defined as:
sub trim(Str(Cool))method trim()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the string with both leading and trailing whitespace stripped.
my = ' abc '.trim;say "<$stripped>"; # OUTPUT: «<abc>»
(Cool) routine trim-leading
Defined as:
sub trim-leading(Str(Cool))method trim-leading()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the string with leading whitespace stripped.
my = ' abc '.trim-leading;say "<$stripped>"; # OUTPUT: «<abc >»
(Cool) routine trim-trailing
Defined as:
sub trim-trailing(Str(Cool))method trim-trailing()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the string with trailing whitespace stripped.
my = ' abc '.trim-trailing;say "<$stripped>"; # OUTPUT: «< abc>»
(Cool) routine lc
Defined as:
sub lc(Str(Cool))method lc()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns it case-folded to lower case.
say "ABC".lc; # OUTPUT: «abc»
(Cool) routine uc
Defined as:
sub uc(Str(Cool))method uc()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns it case-folded to upper case (capital letters).
say "Abc".uc; # OUTPUT: «ABC»
(Cool) routine fc
Defined as:
sub fc(Str(Cool))method fc()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns the result a Unicode "case fold" operation suitable for doing caseless string comparisons. (In general, the returned string is unlikely to be useful for any purpose other than comparison.)
say "groß".fc; # OUTPUT: «gross»
(Cool) routine tc
Defined as:
sub tc(Str(Cool))method tc()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns it with the first letter case-folded to title case (or where not available, upper case).
say "abC".tc; # OUTPUT: «AbC»
(Cool) routine tclc
Defined as:
sub tclc(Str(Cool))method tclc()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns it with the first letter case-folded to title case (or where not available, upper case), and the rest of the string case-folded to lower case.
say 'abC'.tclc; # OUTPUT: «Abc»
(Cool) routine wordcase
Defined as:
sub wordcase(Str(Cool) , : = , Mu : = True)method wordcase(: = , Mu : = True)
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, the first argument) to Str, and filters each word that smartmatches against $where
through the &filter
. With the default filter (first character to upper case, rest to lower) and matcher (which accepts everything), this title-cases each word:
say "perl 6 programming".wordcase; # OUTPUT: «Perl 6 Programming»
With a matcher:
say "have fun working on perl".wordcase(:where());# Have fun Working on Perl
With a customer filter too:
say "have fun working on perl".wordcase(:filter(), :where());# HAVE fun WORKING on PERL
(Cool) routine samecase
Defined as:
sub samecase(Cool , Cool )method samecase(Cool: Cool )
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, the first argument) to Str, and returns a copy of $string
with case information for each individual character changed according to $pattern
.
Note: The pattern string can contain three types of characters, i.e. uppercase, lowercase and caseless. For a given character in $pattern
its case information determines the case of the corresponding character in the result.
If $string
is longer than $pattern
, the case information from the last character of $pattern
is applied to the remaining characters of $string
.
say "perL 6".samecase("A__a__"); # OUTPUT: «Perl 6»say "pERL 6".samecase("Ab"); # OUTPUT: «Perl 6»
(Cool) routine uniprop
Defined as:
multi sub uniprop(Str, |c)multi sub uniprop(Int )multi sub uniprop(Int , Stringy )multi method uniprop(|c)
Returns the unicode property of the first character. If no property is specified returns the General Category. Returns a Bool for Boolean properties. A uniprops routine can be used to get the property for every character in a string.
say 'a'.uniprop; # OUTPUT: «Ll»say '1'.uniprop; # OUTPUT: «Nd»say 'a'.uniprop('Alphabetic'); # OUTPUT: «True»say '1'.uniprop('Alphabetic'); # OUTPUT: «False»
(Cool) sub uniprops
Defined as:
sub uniprops(Str , Stringy = "General_Category")
Interprets the invocant as a Str, and returns the unicode property for each character as a Seq. If no property is specified returns the General Category. Returns a Bool for Boolean properties. Similar to uniprop, but for each character in the passed string.
(Cool) routine uniname
Defined as:
sub uniname(Str(Cool) --> Str)method uniname(--> Str)
Interprets the invocant or first argument as a Str, and returns the Unicode codepoint name of the first codepoint of the first character. See uninames for a routine that works with multiple codepoints, and uniparse for the opposite direction.
# Camelia in Unicodesay ‘»ö«’.uniname;# OUTPUT: «"RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK"»say "Ḍ̇".uniname; # Note, doesn't show "COMBINING DOT ABOVE"# OUTPUT: «"LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH DOT BELOW"»# Find the char with the longest Unicode name.say (0..0x1FFFF).sort(*.uniname.chars)[].chr.uniname;# OUTPUT: ««ARABIC LIGATURE UIGHUR KIRGHIZ YEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE WITH ALEF MAKSURA INITIAL FORM»»
(Cool) routine uninames
Defined as:
sub uninames(Str)method uninames()
Returns of a Seq of Unicode names for the all the codepoints in the Str provided.
say ‘»ö«’.uninames.perl;# OUTPUT: «("RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK", "LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS", "LEFT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK").Seq»
Note this example, which gets a Seq where each element is a Seq of all the codepoints in that character.
say "Ḍ̇'oh".comb>>.uninames.perl;# OUTPUT: «(("LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH DOT BELOW", "COMBINING DOT ABOVE").Seq, ("APOSTROPHE",).Seq, ("LATIN SMALL LETTER O",).Seq, ("LATIN SMALL LETTER H",).Seq)»
See uniparse for the opposite direction.
(Cool) routine unimatch
Defined as:
multi sub unimatch(Str , |c)multi unimatch(Int , Stringy , Stringy = )
Checks if the given integer codepoint or the first letter of the string given have a unicode property equal to the value you give. If you supply the Unicode property to be checked it will only return True if that property matches the given value.
say unimatch 'A', 'Latin'; # OUTPUT: «True»say unimatch 'A', 'Latin', 'Script'; # OUTPUT: «True»say unimatch 'A', 'Ll'; # OUTPUT: «True»
(Cool) routine chop
Defined as:
sub chop(Str(Cool))method chop()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns it with the last character removed.
say 'perl'.chop; # OUTPUT: «per»
(Cool) routine chomp
Defined as:
sub chomp(Str(Cool))method chomp()
Coerces the invocant (or in sub form, its argument) to Str, and returns it with the last character removed, if it is a logical newline.
say 'ab'.chomp.chars; # OUTPUT: «2»say "a\n".chomp.chars; # OUTPUT: «1»
(Cool) routine substr
Defined as:
sub substr(Str(Cool) , |c)method substr(|c)
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the first argument) to Str, and calls Str.substr with the arguments.
(Cool) routine substr-rw
Defined as:
multi method substr-rw(|) is rwmulti sub substr-rw(|) is rw
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the first argument) to Str, and calls Str.substr-rw with the arguments.
(Cool) routine ords
Defined as:
sub ords(Str(Cool) )method ords()
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the first argument) to Str, and returns a list of Unicode codepoints for each character.
say "Camelia".ords; # OUTPUT: «67 97 109 101 108 105 97»say ords 10; # OUTPUT: «49 48»
This is the list-returning version of ord. The inverse operation in chrs. If you are only interested in the number of codepoints, codes is a possibly faster option.
(Cool) routine chrs
Defined as:
sub chrs(* --> Str)method chrs()
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the argument list) to a list of integers, and returns the string created by interpreting each integer as a Unicode codepoint, and joining the characters.
say <67 97 109 101 108 105 97>.chrs; # OUTPUT: «Camelia»
This is the list-input version of chr. The inverse operation is ords.
(Cool) routine split
Defined as:
multi sub split( Str , Str(Cool) , = Inf, :, :, :, :, :)multi sub split(Regex , Str(Cool) , = Inf, :, :, :, :, :)multi sub split(, Str(Cool) , = Inf, :, :, :, :, :)multi method split( Str , = Inf, :, :, :, :, :)multi method split(Regex , = Inf, :, :, :, :, :)multi method split(, = Inf, :, :, :, :, :)
Coerces the invocant (or in the sub form, the second argument) to Str, and splits it into pieces based on delimiters found in the string.
If $delimiter
is a string, it is searched for literally and not treated as a regex. You can also provide multiple delimiters by specifying them as a list; mixing Cool and Regex objects is OK.
say split(';', "a;b;c").perl; # OUTPUT: «("a", "b", "c")»say split(';', "a;b;c", 2).perl; # OUTPUT: «("a", "b;c").Seq»say split(';', "a;b;c,d").perl; # OUTPUT: «("a", "b", "c,d")»say split(/\;/, "a;b;c,d").perl; # OUTPUT: «("a", "b", "c,d")»say split(//, "a;b;c,d").perl; # OUTPUT: «("a", "b", "c", "d")»say split(['a', /b+/, 4], '1a2bb345').perl; # OUTPUT: «("1", "2", "3", "5")»
By default, split omits the matches, and returns a list of only those parts of the string that did not match. Specifying one of the :k, :v, :kv, :p
adverbs changes that. Think of the matches as a list that is interleaved with the non-matching parts.
The :v
interleaves the values of that list, which will be either Match objects, if a Regex was used as a matcher in the split, or Str objects, if a Cool was used as matcher. If multiple delimiters are specified, Match objects will be generated for all of them, unless all of the delimiters are Cool.
say 'abc'.split(/b/, :v); # OUTPUT: «(a 「b」 c)»say 'abc'.split('b', :v); # OUTPUT: «(a b c)»
:k
interleaves the keys, that is, the indexes:
say 'abc'.split(/b/, :k); # OUTPUT: «(a 0 c)»
:kv
adds both indexes and matches:
say 'abc'.split(/b/, :kv); # OUTPUT: «(a 0 「b」 c)»
and :p
adds them as Pairs, using the same types for values as :v
does:
say 'abc'.split(/b/, :p); # OUTPUT: «(a 0 => 「b」 c)»say 'abc'.split('b', :p); # OUTPUT: «(a 0 => b c)»
You can only use one of the :k, :v, :kv, :p
adverbs in a single call to split
.
Note that empty chunks are not removed from the result list. For that behavior, use the :skip-empty
named argument:
say ("f,,b,c,d".split: /","/ ).perl; # OUTPUT: «("f", "", "b", "c", "d")»say ("f,,b,c,d".split: /","/, :skip-empty).perl; # OUTPUT: «("f", "b", "c", "d")»
(Cool) routine lines
Defined as:
sub lines(Str(Cool))method lines()
Coerces the invocant (and in sub form, the argument) to Str, decomposes it into lines (with the newline characters stripped), and returns the list of lines.
say lines("a\nb\n").join('|'); # OUTPUT: «a|b»say "some\nmore\nlines".lines.elems; # OUTPUT: «3»
This method can be used as part of an IO::Path
to process a file line-by-line, since IO::Path
objects inherit from Cool
, e.g.:
for 'huge-csv'.IO.lines -># or if you'll be processing latermy = 'huge-csv'.IO.lines;
Without any arguments, sub lines
operates on $*ARGFILES
, which defaults to $*IN
in the absence of any filenames.
To modify values in place use is copy
to force a writable container.
for .lines -> is copy
(Cool) method words
Defined as:
method words(Cool: |c)
Coerces the invocant (or first argument, if it is called as a subroutine) to Str, and returns a list of words that make up the string. Check Str.words
for additional arguments and its meaning.
say <The quick brown fox>.words.join('|'); # OUTPUT: «The|quick|brown|fox»say <The quick brown fox>.words(2).join('|'); # OUTPUT: «The|quick»
Cool
is the base class for many other classes, and some of them, like Match, can be converted to a string. This is what happens in this case:
say ( "easy come, easy goes" ~~ m:g/(ea\w+)/).words(Inf);# OUTPUT: «(easy easy)»say words( "easy come, easy goes" ~~ m:g/(ea\w+)/ , ∞);# OUTPUT: «(easy easy)»
The example above illustrates two of the ways words
can be invoked, with the first argument turned into invocant by its signature. Of course, Inf
is the default value of the second argument, so in both cases (and forms) it can be simply omitted.
Only whitespace (including no-break space) counts as word boundaries
say <Don't we ♥ Perl 6>.words.join('|'); # OUTPUT: «Don't|we|♥|Perl|6»
In this case, Perl 6 includes an (visible only in the source) no-break space; words
still splits the (resulting) Str
on it, even if the original array only had 4 elements:
say <Don't we ♥ Perl 6>.join("|"); # OUTPUT: «Don't|we|♥|Perl 6»
Please see Str.words
for more examples and ways to invoke it.
(Cool) routine comb
Defined as:
multi sub comb(Regex , Cool , = *)multi sub comb(Str , Cool , = *)multi sub comb(Int , Cool , = *)multi method comb(|c)
Returns a Seq of all (or if supplied, at most $limit
) matches of the invocant (method form) or the second argument (sub form) against the Regex, string or defined number.
say "6 or 12".comb(/\d+/).join(", "); # OUTPUT: «6, 12»say comb(/\d /,(11..30)).join("--");# OUTPUT:# «11--12--13--14--15--16--17--18--19--21--22--23--24--25--26--27--28--29»
The second statement exemplifies the first form of comb
, with a Regex
that excludes multiples of ten, and a Range
(which is Cool
) as $input
. comb
stringifies the Range
before applying .comb
on the resulting string. Check Str.comb
for its effect on different kind of input strings. When the first argument is an integer, it indicates the (maximum) size of the chunks the input is going to be divided in
say comb(3,[3,33,333,3333]).join("*"); # OUTPUT: «3 3*3 3*33 *333*3»
In this case the input is a list, which after transformation to Str
(which includes the spaces) is divided in chunks of size 3.
(Cool) method contains
Defined as:
method contains(Cool: |c)
Coerces the invocant Str
, and calls Str.contains
on it. Please refer to that version of the method for arguments and general syntax.
say 123.contains("2")# OUTPUT: «True»
Since Int is a subclass of Cool
, 123
is coerced to a Str
and then contains
is called on it.
say (1,1, * + * … * > 250).contains(233)# OUTPUT: «True»
Seqs are also subclasses of Cool
, and they are stringified to a comma-separated form. In this case we are also using an Int
, which is going to be stringified also; "233"
is included in that sequence, so it returns True
. Please note that this sequence is not lazy; the stringification of lazy sequences does not include each and every one of their components for obvious reasons.
(Cool) routine index
Defined as:
multi sub index(Cool , Cool , Cool = 0)method index(Cool: |c)
Coerces the first two arguments (in method form, also counting the invocant) to a Str, and searches for $needle
in the string $s
starting from $startpos
. It returns the offset into the string where $needle
was found, and an undefined value if it was not found.
See the documentation in type Str for examples.
(Cool) routine rindex
Defined as:
multi sub rindex(Str(Cool) , Str(Cool) , Int(Cool) = .chars)multi method rindex(Str(Cool) : Str(Cool) , Int(Cool) = .chars)
Coerces the first two arguments (including the invocant in method form) to Str and $startpos
to Int, and returns the last position of $needle
in $haystack
not after $startpos
. Returns an undefined value if $needle
wasn't found.
See the documentation in type Str for examples.
(Cool) method match
Defined as:
multi method match(Cool: , *)
Coerces the invocant to Str and calls the method match on it.
(Cool) routine roots
Defined as:
multi sub roots(Numeric(Cool) , Int(Cool) )multi method roots(Int(Cool) )
Coerces the first argument (and in method form, the invocant) to Numeric and the second ($n
) to Int, and produces a list of $n
Complex $n
-roots, which means numbers that, raised to the $n
th power, approximately produce the original number.
For example
my = 16;my = .roots(4);say ;for -># OUTPUT:«2+0i 1.22464679914735e-16+2i -2+2.44929359829471e-16i -3.67394039744206e-16-2i»# OUTPUT:«1.77635683940025e-15»# OUTPUT:«4.30267170434156e-15»# OUTPUT:«8.03651692704705e-15»# OUTPUT:«1.04441561648202e-14»
(Cool) method match
Defined as:
method match(|)
Coerces the invocant to Stringy and calls Str.match.
(Cool) method subst
Defined as:
method subst(|)
Coerces the invocant to Stringy and calls Str.subst.
(Cool) method trans
Defined as:
method trans(|)
Coerces the invocant to Str and calls Str.trans
(Cool) method IO
Defined as:
method IO(--> IO::Path)
Coerces the invocant to IO::Path.
.say for '.'.IO.dir; # gives a directory listing