Hi Hans-Jürgen,
Is this intended? Would one not expect that any path returned by a file:* function *is* native?
(Remark: the difference of case can become very important when constructing relative paths.)
The exact behavior of the file functions depend a lot on the operating system and local environment: As Windows ignores case, both "C:\a" and "C:\A" point to the same resource. It is only file:path-to-native (or Path.toRealPath, in Java) that retrieves the exact writing from the file system.
If we enforced all paths to be “native”, every function that references a nonexisting path would raise an error.
If you need a canonical path representation, however, and if you know that your files exist, it is best to always call file:path-to-native (it will also give you a good chance to think about the handling of symbolic links ;·).
Hope this helps, Christian ________________________________ Von: Hans-Juergen Rennau via BaseX-Talk basex-talk@mailman.uni-konstanz.de Gesendet: Freitag, 8. August 2025 11:40 An: BaseX basex-talk@mailman.uni-konstanz.de Betreff: [basex-talk] file:current-dir(), file:path-to-native()
Dear BaseX people,
I noticed a peculiar behaviour of file:current-dir() on a Windows system.
file:current-dir() => C:\program files\Oxygen XML Editor 25\
file:path-to-native(current-dir() => C:\Program Files\Oxygen XML Editor 25\
Note the difference: "Program Files" vs. "programfiles".
Is this intended? Would one not expect that any path returned by a file:* function *is* native? (Remark: the difference of case can become very important when constructing relative paths.)
Kind regards, Hans-Jürgen
: On the system in question, the folder "Program Files" is mapped to "programme" (I do not know the reasons.
cu