Mail Archives: cygwin/2007/06/23/03:58:54
From what I read the following should work, but it doesn't.
Can one of you familiar with cygwin's perl help me out.
Why doesn't the test, -d, for directory work on the subdirectory?
It should, in my considered opinion.
Below is sufficient code to perform a simple test.
Your help is appreciated.
Regards,
wynfield
prepare for the test from the command line:
$ mkdir /bozo
$ mkdir /bozo/bozo_the_clown_dir
Check this:
find /bozo -type d -print
/bozo
/bozo/bozo_the_clown_dir
-- ok we have a directory and it has a subdirectory
Sample code:
------------------ start of simple perl program
#! /bin/perl
my $ldir="/bozo";
if ( ! opendir DH, $ldir)
{
print "Couldn't open as a dir: $ldir. \n";
exit 0;
}
print "Processing directory: $ldir\n";
while ( $_ = readdir(DH) ) # will be either a file or directory name
{
if ( $_ eq "." or $_ eq ".." ) { print "dir . or ..\n"; next; }
if ( -d $_ ) { print "This is directory: $_\n"; next; }
print "Escaped detection $_\n";
}
close (DH);
---------------------------- end of sample code
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