QFileInfo Class Reference
The QFileInfo class provides system-independent file information.
More...
#include <qfileinfo.h>
List of all member functions.
Public Members
enum PermissionSpec { ReadUser = 0400, WriteUser = 0200, ExeUser = 0100, ReadGroup = 0040, WriteGroup = 0020, ExeGroup = 0010, ReadOther = 0004, WriteOther = 0002, ExeOther = 0001 }
-
-
-
QFileInfo ( const QDir &, const QString & fileName )Â
-
-
QFileInfo&Â
operator= ( const QFileInfo & )Â
voidÂ
setFile ( const QString & file )Â
voidÂ
setFile ( const QFile & )Â
voidÂ
setFile ( const QDir &, const QString & fileName )Â
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
QStringÂ
extension ( bool complete = TRUE ) const
QStringÂ
dirPath ( bool absPath = FALSE ) const
QDirÂ
dir ( bool absPath = FALSE ) const
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
QStringÂ
owner () const
-
QStringÂ
group () const
-
boolÂ
permission ( int permissionSpec ) const
-
-
-
Detailed Description
The QFileInfo class provides system-independent file information.
QFileInfo provides information about a file's name and position (path) in
the file system, its access rights and whether it is a directory or a
symbolic link. Its size and last modified/read times are also available.
To speed up performance QFileInfo caches information about the file. Since
files can be changed by other users or programs, or even by other parts of
the same program there is a function that refreshes the file information;
refresh(). If you would rather like a QFileInfo to access the file system
every time you request information from it, you can call the function
setCaching( FALSE ).
A QFileInfo can point to a file using either a relative or an absolute
file path. Absolute file paths begin with the directory separator
('/') or a drive specification (not applicable to UNIX).
Relative file names begin with a directory name or a file name and specify
a path relative to the current directory. An example of
an absolute path is the string "/tmp/quartz". A relative path might look like
"src/fatlib". You can use the function isRelative() to check if a QFileInfo
is using a relative or an absolute file path. You can call the function
convertToAbs() to convert a relative QFileInfo to an absolute one.
If you need to read and traverse directories, see the QDir class.
Examples:
i18n/main.cpp
dirview/main.cpp
Member Function Documentation
QFileInfo::QFileInfo ()
Constructs a new empty QFileInfo.
QFileInfo::QFileInfo ( const QDir & d, const QString & fileName )
Constructs a new QFileInfo that gives information about the file
named fileName in the directory d.
If the directory has a relative path, the QFileInfo will also have one.
See also isRelative().
QFileInfo::QFileInfo ( const QFile & file )
Constructs a new QFileInfo that gives information about file.
If the file has a relative path, the QFileInfo will also have one.
See also isRelative().
QFileInfo::QFileInfo ( const QString & file )
Constructs a new QFileInfo that gives information about the given file.
The string given can be an absolute or a relative file path.
See also bool, setFile(QString, ), isRelative(), QDir::setCurrent() and QDir::isRelativePath().
QFileInfo::QFileInfo ( const QFileInfo & fi )
Constructs a new QFileInfo that is a copy of fi.
QFileInfo::~QFileInfo ()
Destructs the QFileInfo.
QString QFileInfo::absFilePath () const
Returns the absolute path name.
The absolute path name is the file name including the absolute path. If
the QFileInfo is absolute (i.e. not relative) this function will return
the same string as filePath().
Note that this function can be time-consuming under UNIX. (in the order
of milliseconds on a 486 DX2/66 running Linux).
See also isRelative() and filePath().
QString QFileInfo::baseName () const
Returns the base name of the file.
The base name consists of all characters in the file name up to (but not
including) the first '.' character. The path is not included.
Example:
QFileInfo fi( "/tmp/abdomen.lower" );
QString base = fi.baseName(); // base = "abdomen"
See also fileName() and extension().
bool QFileInfo::caching () const
Returns TRUE if caching is enabled.
See also setCaching() and refresh().
bool QFileInfo::convertToAbs ()
Converts the file path name to an absolute path.
If it is already absolute nothing is done.
See also filePath() and isRelative().
QDir QFileInfo::dir ( bool absPath = FALSE ) const
Returns the directory path of the file.
If the QFileInfo is relative and absPath is FALSE, the QDir will be
relative, otherwise it will be absolute.
See also dirPath(), filePath(), fileName() and isRelative().
QString QFileInfo::dirPath ( bool absPath = FALSE ) const
Returns the directory path of the file.
If absPath is TRUE an absolute path is always returned.
See also dir(), filePath(), fileName() and isRelative().
bool QFileInfo::exists () const
Returns TRUE if the file pointed to exists, otherwise FALSE.
Examples:
i18n/main.cpp
QString QFileInfo::extension ( bool complete = TRUE ) const
Returns the extension name of the file.
If complete is TRUE (the default), extension() returns the string
of all characters in the file name after (but not including) the
first '.' character. For a file named "archive.tar.gz" this
returns "tar.gz".
If complete is FALSE, extension() returns the string of all
characters in the file name after (but not including) the last '.'
character. For a file named "archive.tar.gz" this returns "gz".
Example:
QFileInfo fi( "lex.yy.c" );
QString ext = fi.extension(); // ext = "yy.c"
QString ext = fi.extension( FALSE ); // ext = "c"
See also fileName() and baseName().
QString QFileInfo::fileName () const
Returns the name of the file, the file path is not included.
Example:
QFileInfo fi( "/tmp/abdomen.lower" );
QString name = fi.fileName(); // name = "abdomen.lower"
See also isRelative(), filePath(), baseName() and extension().
QString QFileInfo::filePath () const
Returns the name, i.e. the file name including the path (which can be
absolute or relative).
See also isRelative() and absFilePath().
Examples:
dirview/main.cpp
QString QFileInfo::group () const
Returns the group the file belongs to.
On systems where files do not have groups this function always
returns 0.
Note that this function can be time-consuming under UNIX (in the order of
milliseconds on a 486 DX2/66 running Linux).
See also groupId(), owner() and ownerId().
uint QFileInfo::groupId () const
Returns the id of the group the file belongs to.
On systems where files do not have groups this function always
returns ((uind) -2).
See also group(), owner() and ownerId().
bool QFileInfo::isDir () const
Returns TRUE if we are pointing to a directory or a symbolic link to
a directory.
See also isFile() and isSymLink().
bool QFileInfo::isExecutable () const
Returns TRUE if the file is executable.
See also isReadable(), isWritable() and permission().
bool QFileInfo::isFile () const
Returns TRUE if we are pointing to a real file.
See also isDir() and isSymLink().
bool QFileInfo::isReadable () const
Returns TRUE if the file is readable.
See also isWritable(), isExecutable() and permission().
bool QFileInfo::isRelative () const
Returns TRUE if the file path name is relative to the current directory,
FALSE if the path is absolute (e.g. under UNIX a path is relative if it
does not start with a '/').
According to Einstein this function should always return TRUE.
bool QFileInfo::isSymLink () const
Returns TRUE if we are pointing to a symbolic link.
See also isFile(), isDir() and readLink().
bool QFileInfo::isWritable () const
Returns TRUE if the file is writable.
See also isReadable(), isExecutable() and permission().
QDateTime QFileInfo::lastModified () const
Returns the date and time when the file was last modified.
See also lastRead().
QDateTime QFileInfo::lastRead () const
Returns the date and time when the file was last read (accessed).
On systems that do not support last read times, the modification time is
returned.
See also lastModified().
QFileInfo & QFileInfo::operator= ( const QFileInfo & fi )
Makes a copy of fi and assigns it to this QFileInfo.
QString QFileInfo::owner () const
Returns the owner of the file.
On systems where files do not have owners this function returns 0.
Note that this function can be time-consuming under UNIX. (in the order
of milliseconds on a 486 DX2/66 running Linux).
See also ownerId(), group() and groupId().
uint QFileInfo::ownerId () const
Returns the id of the owner of the file.
On systems where files do not have owners this function returns ((uint) -2).
See also owner(), group() and groupId().
bool QFileInfo::permission ( int permissionSpec ) const
Tests for file permissions. The permissionSpec argument can be several
flags of type PermissionSpec or'ed together to check for permission
combinations.
On systems where files do not have permissions this function always
returns TRUE.
Example:
QFileInfo fi( "/tmp/tonsils" );
if ( fi.permission( QFileInfo::WriteUser | QFileInfo::ReadGroup ) )
qWarning( "Tonsils can be changed by me, and the group can read them.");
if ( fi.permission( QFileInfo::WriteGroup | QFileInfo::WriteOther ) )
qWarning( "Danger! Tonsils can be changed by the group or others!" );
See also isReadable(), isWritable() and isExecutable().
QString QFileInfo::readLink () const
Returns the name a symlink points to, or a null QString if the
object does not refer to a symbolic link.
This name may not represent an existing file; it is only a string.
QFileInfo::exists() returns TRUE if the symlink points to an
existing file.
See also exists(), isSymLink(), isDir() and isFile().
void QFileInfo::refresh () const
Refresh the information about the file, i.e. read in information from the
file system the next time a cached property is fetched.
See also setCaching().
void QFileInfo::setCaching ( bool enable )
Enables caching of file information if enable is TRUE, or disables it
if enable is FALSE.
When caching is enabled, QFileInfo reads the file information the first
time
Caching is enabled by default.
See also refresh() and caching().
void QFileInfo::setFile ( const QDir & d, const QString & fileName )
Sets the file to obtains information about to fileName in the
directory d.
If the directory has a relative path, the QFileInfo will also have one.
See also isRelative().
void QFileInfo::setFile ( const QFile & file )
Sets the file to obtain information about.
If the file has a relative path, the QFileInfo will also have one.
See also isRelative().
void QFileInfo::setFile ( const QString & file )
Sets the file to obtain information about.
The string given can be an absolute or a relative file path. Absolute file
paths begin with the directory separator (e.g. '/' under UNIX) or a drive
specification (not applicable to UNIX). Relative file names begin with a
directory name or a file name and specify a path relative to the current
directory.
Example:
#include <qfileinfo.h>
#include <qdir.h>
void test()
{
QString absolute = "/liver/aorta";
QString relative = "liver/aorta";
QFileInfo fi1( absolute );
QFileInfo fi2( relative );
QDir::setCurrent( QDir::rootDirPath() );
// fi1 and fi2 now point to the same file
QDir::setCurrent( "/tmp" );
// fi1 now points to "/liver/aorta",
// while fi2 points to "/tmp/liver/aorta"
}
See also isRelative(), QDir::setCurrent() and QDir::isRelativePath().
uint QFileInfo::size () const
Returns the file size in bytes, or 0 if the file does not exist if the size
cannot be fetched.
Search the documentation, FAQ, qt-interest archive and more (uses
www.trolltech.com):
This file is part of the Qt toolkit,
copyright © 1995-2005
Trolltech, all rights reserved.