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Mail Archives: djgpp-workers/2001/10/12/04:40:48

Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2001 10:39:25 +0200
From: "Eli Zaretskii" <eliz AT is DOT elta DOT co DOT il>
Sender: halo1 AT zahav DOT net DOT il
To: Tim Van Holder <tim DOT van DOT holder AT pandora DOT be>
Message-Id: <6137-Fri12Oct2001103925+0200-eliz@is.elta.co.il>
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CC: djgpp-workers AT delorie DOT com
In-reply-to: <1002872267.31951.8.camel@bender.falconsoft.be> (message from Tim
Van Holder on 12 Oct 2001 09:37:46 +0200)
Subject: Re: W2K/XP fncase [was Re: New perl package]
References: <10110120257 DOT AA19829 AT clio DOT rice DOT edu>
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> From: Tim Van Holder <tim DOT van DOT holder AT pandora DOT be>
> Date: 12 Oct 2001 09:37:46 +0200
> > > 
> > > W2K:
> > > short: TEST. long: test
> > > short: _67C0CVS. long: _.CVS
> > > Fixpath: c:/test/_.CVS
> > 
> > Good God!
> 
> Was this on a FAT32 or NTFS filesystem (the 'c:' suggests the latter)?
> Since NTFS does not store a short name, that might make a difference.

I don't think it should make any difference.  Function 71A8h doesn't
hit the disk, it simply runs the algorithm used by Windows to generate
a short alias for a long name.  That's why this function works even
for non-existing files, and that's why it returns a name without a
numeric tail even if numeric tails are in effect.  It doesn't read the
directory, it just transforms the name in memory.

> Fair enough - after all, the only reason we have FNCASE at all is to
> avoid seeing DOS names as all-uppercase, right?  And XP users are
> unlikely to have many FAT32 partitions where that problem could show up.

I think your assumption is wrong: this isn't related to FAT.  Try
running `ls' on c:\winnt (or whatever it is called on XP) and its
subdirectories, and I think you will see lots of UPPER case.

In addition, many Windows systems have files copied from DOS disks
which Windows in its infinite wisdom copies without downcasing the
string stored in the long name part of the directory entry.

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