| BASENAME(3) | Library Functions Manual | BASENAME(3) |
basename — return
the last component of a pathname
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<libgen.h>
char *
basename(char
*path);
The
basename()
function takes the pathname pointed to by path and
returns a pointer to the final component of the pathname, deleting any
trailing ‘/’ characters.
If path consists entirely of
‘/’ characters,
basename()
returns a pointer to the string “/”.
If path is a null pointer or
points to an empty string,
basename()
returns a pointer to the string “.”.
The basename() function returns a pointer
to the final component of path.
If the length of the result is longer than
PATH_MAX bytes (including the terminating nul), the
result will be truncated.
The basename() function returns a pointer
to static storage that may be overwritten by subsequent calls to
basename(). This is not strictly a bug; it is
explicitly allowed by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
(“POSIX.1”).
| May 10, 2008 | NetBSD 11.0 |