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glob-parent

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    glob-parent

Strips glob magic from a string to provide the parent directory path


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Package description

What is glob-parent?

The glob-parent npm package is used to extract the non-magic parent path from a glob string, which is useful for determining the directory that a glob is intended to match against, for ensuring consistent behavior in file watching and globbing.

What are glob-parent's main functionalities?

Extracting non-magic parent path from a glob string

This feature allows you to get the directory path without any glob patterns, which is useful for file operations that require a base directory.

const globParent = require('glob-parent');

console.log(globParent('path/to/*.js')); // Output: 'path/to'

Other packages similar to glob-parent

Changelog

Source

3.1.0 (2021-01-27)

Features

  • allow basic win32 backslash use (272afa5)
  • handle extglobs (parentheses) containing separators (7db1bdb)
  • new approach to braces/brackets handling (8269bd8)
  • pre-process braces/brackets sections (9ef8a87)
  • preserve escaped brace/bracket at end of string (8cfb0ba)

Bug Fixes

  • trailing escaped square brackets (99ec9fe)

Readme

Source

glob-parent Build Status Coverage Status

Javascript module to extract the non-magic parent path from a glob string.

NPM NPM

Usage

npm install glob-parent --save

Examples

var globParent = require('glob-parent');

globParent('path/to/*.js'); // 'path/to'
globParent('/root/path/to/*.js'); // '/root/path/to'
globParent('/*.js'); // '/'
globParent('*.js'); // '.'
globParent('**/*.js'); // '.'
globParent('path/{to,from}'); // 'path'
globParent('path/!(to|from)'); // 'path'
globParent('path/?(to|from)'); // 'path'
globParent('path/+(to|from)'); // 'path'
globParent('path/*(to|from)'); // 'path'
globParent('path/@(to|from)'); // 'path'
globParent('path/**/*'); // 'path'

// if provided a non-glob path, returns the nearest dir
globParent('path/foo/bar.js'); // 'path/foo'
globParent('path/foo/'); // 'path/foo'
globParent('path/foo'); // 'path' (see issue #3 for details)

Escaping

The following characters have special significance in glob patterns and must be escaped if you want them to be treated as regular path characters:

  • ? (question mark)
  • * (star)
  • | (pipe)
  • ( (opening parenthesis)
  • ) (closing parenthesis)
  • { (opening curly brace)
  • } (closing curly brace)
  • [ (opening bracket)
  • ] (closing bracket)

Example

globParent('foo/[bar]/') // 'foo'
globParent('foo/\\[bar]/') // 'foo/[bar]'

Limitations

Braces & Brackets

This library attempts a quick and imperfect method of determining which path parts have glob magic without fully parsing/lexing the pattern. There are some advanced use cases that can trip it up, such as nested braces where the outer pair is escaped and the inner one contains a path separator. If you find yourself in the unlikely circumstance of being affected by this or need to ensure higher-fidelity glob handling in your library, it is recommended that you pre-process your input with expand-braces and/or expand-brackets.

Windows

Backslashes are not valid path separators for globs. If a path with backslashes is provided anyway, for simple cases, glob-parent will replace the path separator for you and return the non-glob parent path (now with forward-slashes, which are still valid as Windows path separators).

This cannot be used in conjunction with escape characters.

// BAD
globParent('C:\\Program Files \\(x86\\)\\*.ext') // 'C:/Program Files /(x86/)'

// GOOD
globParent('C:/Program Files\\(x86\\)/*.ext') // 'C:/Program Files (x86)'

If you are using escape characters for a pattern without path parts (i.e. relative to cwd), prefix with ./ to avoid confusing glob-parent.

// BAD
globParent('foo \\[bar]') // 'foo '
globParent('foo \\[bar]*') // 'foo '

// GOOD
globParent('./foo \\[bar]') // 'foo [bar]'
globParent('./foo \\[bar]*') // '.'

Change Log

See release notes page on GitHub

License

ISC

Keywords

FAQs

Last updated on 14 Dec 2016

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