go1.20.5
GoThrough

path.ErrBadPattern

// ErrBadPattern indicates a pattern was malformed. var ErrBadPattern = errors.New("syntax error in pattern")

path.Base

// Base returns the last element of path. // Trailing slashes are removed before extracting the last element. // If the path is empty, Base returns ".". // If the path consists entirely of slashes, Base returns "/". func Base(path string) string

path.Clean

// Clean returns the shortest path name equivalent to path // by purely lexical processing. It applies the following rules // iteratively until no further processing can be done: // // 1. Replace multiple slashes with a single slash. // 2. Eliminate each . path name element (the current directory). // 3. Eliminate each inner .. path name element (the parent directory) // along with the non-.. element that precedes it. // 4. Eliminate .. elements that begin a rooted path: // that is, replace "/.." by "/" at the beginning of a path. // // The returned path ends in a slash only if it is the root "/". // // If the result of this process is an empty string, Clean // returns the string ".". // // See also Rob Pike, “Lexical File Names in Plan 9 or // Getting Dot-Dot Right,” // https://9p.io/sys/doc/lexnames.html func Clean(path string) string

path.Dir

// Dir returns all but the last element of path, typically the path's directory. // After dropping the final element using Split, the path is Cleaned and trailing // slashes are removed. // If the path is empty, Dir returns ".". // If the path consists entirely of slashes followed by non-slash bytes, Dir // returns a single slash. In any other case, the returned path does not end in a // slash. func Dir(path string) string

path.Ext

// Ext returns the file name extension used by path. // The extension is the suffix beginning at the final dot // in the final slash-separated element of path; // it is empty if there is no dot. func Ext(path string) string

path.IsAbs

// IsAbs reports whether the path is absolute. func IsAbs(path string) bool

path.Join

// Join joins any number of path elements into a single path, // separating them with slashes. Empty elements are ignored. // The result is Cleaned. However, if the argument list is // empty or all its elements are empty, Join returns // an empty string. func Join(elem ...string) string

path.Match

// Match reports whether name matches the shell pattern. // The pattern syntax is: // // pattern: // { term } // term: // '*' matches any sequence of non-/ characters // '?' matches any single non-/ character // '[' [ '^' ] { character-range } ']' // character class (must be non-empty) // c matches character c (c != '*', '?', '\\', '[') // '\\' c matches character c // // character-range: // c matches character c (c != '\\', '-', ']') // '\\' c matches character c // lo '-' hi matches character c for lo <= c <= hi // // Match requires pattern to match all of name, not just a substring. // The only possible returned error is ErrBadPattern, when pattern // is malformed. func Match(pattern string, name string) (matched bool, err error)

path.Split

// Split splits path immediately following the final slash, // separating it into a directory and file name component. // If there is no slash in path, Split returns an empty dir and // file set to path. // The returned values have the property that path = dir+file. func Split(path string) (dir string, file string)