1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159
|
declare module "path" {
/**
* A parsed path object generated by path.parse() or consumed by path.format().
*/
interface ParsedPath {
/**
* The root of the path such as '/' or 'c:\'
*/
root: string;
/**
* The full directory path such as '/home/user/dir' or 'c:\path\dir'
*/
dir: string;
/**
* The file name including extension (if any) such as 'index.html'
*/
base: string;
/**
* The file extension (if any) such as '.html'
*/
ext: string;
/**
* The file name without extension (if any) such as 'index'
*/
name: string;
}
interface FormatInputPathObject {
/**
* The root of the path such as '/' or 'c:\'
*/
root?: string;
/**
* The full directory path such as '/home/user/dir' or 'c:\path\dir'
*/
dir?: string;
/**
* The file name including extension (if any) such as 'index.html'
*/
base?: string;
/**
* The file extension (if any) such as '.html'
*/
ext?: string;
/**
* The file name without extension (if any) such as 'index'
*/
name?: string;
}
/**
* Normalize a string path, reducing '..' and '.' parts.
* When multiple slashes are found, they're replaced by a single one; when the path contains a trailing slash, it is preserved. On Windows backslashes are used.
*
* @param p string path to normalize.
*/
function normalize(p: string): string;
/**
* Join all arguments together and normalize the resulting path.
* Arguments must be strings. In v0.8, non-string arguments were silently ignored. In v0.10 and up, an exception is thrown.
*
* @param paths paths to join.
*/
function join(...paths: string[]): string;
/**
* The right-most parameter is considered {to}. Other parameters are considered an array of {from}.
*
* Starting from leftmost {from} parameter, resolves {to} to an absolute path.
*
* If {to} isn't already absolute, {from} arguments are prepended in right to left order,
* until an absolute path is found. If after using all {from} paths still no absolute path is found,
* the current working directory is used as well. The resulting path is normalized,
* and trailing slashes are removed unless the path gets resolved to the root directory.
*
* @param pathSegments string paths to join. Non-string arguments are ignored.
*/
function resolve(...pathSegments: string[]): string;
/**
* Determines whether {path} is an absolute path. An absolute path will always resolve to the same location, regardless of the working directory.
*
* @param path path to test.
*/
function isAbsolute(path: string): boolean;
/**
* Solve the relative path from {from} to {to}.
* At times we have two absolute paths, and we need to derive the relative path from one to the other. This is actually the reverse transform of path.resolve.
*/
function relative(from: string, to: string): string;
/**
* Return the directory name of a path. Similar to the Unix dirname command.
*
* @param p the path to evaluate.
*/
function dirname(p: string): string;
/**
* Return the last portion of a path. Similar to the Unix basename command.
* Often used to extract the file name from a fully qualified path.
*
* @param p the path to evaluate.
* @param ext optionally, an extension to remove from the result.
*/
function basename(p: string, ext?: string): string;
/**
* Return the extension of the path, from the last '.' to end of string in the last portion of the path.
* If there is no '.' in the last portion of the path or the first character of it is '.', then it returns an empty string
*
* @param p the path to evaluate.
*/
function extname(p: string): string;
/**
* The platform-specific file separator. '\\' or '/'.
*/
const sep: '\\' | '/';
/**
* The platform-specific file delimiter. ';' or ':'.
*/
const delimiter: ';' | ':';
/**
* Returns an object from a path string - the opposite of format().
*
* @param pathString path to evaluate.
*/
function parse(pathString: string): ParsedPath;
/**
* Returns a path string from an object - the opposite of parse().
*
* @param pathString path to evaluate.
*/
function format(pathObject: FormatInputPathObject): string;
namespace posix {
function normalize(p: string): string;
function join(...paths: any[]): string;
function resolve(...pathSegments: any[]): string;
function isAbsolute(p: string): boolean;
function relative(from: string, to: string): string;
function dirname(p: string): string;
function basename(p: string, ext?: string): string;
function extname(p: string): string;
const sep: string;
const delimiter: string;
function parse(p: string): ParsedPath;
function format(pP: FormatInputPathObject): string;
}
namespace win32 {
function normalize(p: string): string;
function join(...paths: any[]): string;
function resolve(...pathSegments: any[]): string;
function isAbsolute(p: string): boolean;
function relative(from: string, to: string): string;
function dirname(p: string): string;
function basename(p: string, ext?: string): string;
function extname(p: string): string;
const sep: string;
const delimiter: string;
function parse(p: string): ParsedPath;
function format(pP: FormatInputPathObject): string;
}
}
|