use File::Basename;
- ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist)
+ ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist);
+ $name = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist);
fileparse_set_fstype($os_string);
$basename = basename($fullname,@suffixlist);
$dirname = dirname($fullname);
($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse("lib/File/Basename.pm",qr{\.pm});
fileparse_set_fstype("VMS");
- $basename = basename("lib/File/Basename.pm",qr{\.pm});
+ $basename = basename("lib/File/Basename.pm",".pm");
$dirname = dirname("lib/File/Basename.pm");
=head1 DESCRIPTION
B<suffix> together in that order, the result will denote the same
file as the input file specification.
+In scalar context, fileparse() returns only the B<name> part of the filename.
+
=back
=head1 EXAMPLES
# not be available.
BEGIN {
unless (eval { require re; })
- { eval ' sub re::import { $^H |= 0x00100000; } ' }
+ { eval ' sub re::import { $^H |= 0x00100000; } ' } # HINT_RE_TAINT
import re 'taint';
}
require Exporter;
@ISA = qw(Exporter);
@EXPORT = qw(fileparse fileparse_set_fstype basename dirname);
-$VERSION = "2.71";
+$VERSION = "2.73";
# fileparse_set_fstype() - specify OS-based rules used in future