Please note that the recommended version of Scilab is 2025.0.0. This page might be outdated.
See the recommended documentation of this function
listfiles
list of files
Syntax
files = listfiles(paths [, flag, flagexpand])
Arguments
- paths
a string matrix giving a set of pathnames (eventually ended by a pattern built with
*
).- flag, flagexpand
boolean optional parameters (default value is
%t
).- files
a string matrix.
Description
listfiles
can be used to list the files which match
the patterns given by one of the paths entries.
Patterns are given to the Unix ls
or to the Windows
dir
commands in order to get information about files.
Thus in order to write portable Scilab script valid wildcard patterns
for both OS are to be given. Note that pathname conversion is
performed and for example SCI/core/macros/*.sci
is a valid
pattern for both Unix and Windows.
If flag
is true the pathnames given by
paths
are converted according to the getos() == 'Windows'
value (see also pathconvert).
Moreover, if flagexpand
is true leading strings like
SCIHOME
, SCI
or
~
are expanded using environment variables.
If the input argument paths
is the name of a directory, the returned files
are the names relative to that directory.
If the input argument paths
contains more than one element, or if it contains
a pattern (e.g. "/*"
, "*.c"
), the returned files
are the absolute paths (i.e.
file name prepended with the name of the directory).
Examples
files=listfiles(['SCI/modules/core/macros/*.sci';'SCI/modules/core/macros/*.bin']);
See also
- findfiles — finding all files with a given file specification
- basename — strip directory and suffix from filenames
- pathconvert — converts a path to an OS path format.
History
Version | Description |
5.4.0 | If paths is not a single string, all returned files are homogenized with the absolute path form. |
6.0.2 | Under Windows, up to 6.0.1, listfile("test") actually
performed listfile("test.*") . It is no longer the case. |
Report an issue | ||
<< isfile | file_system | mdelete >> |