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cpython/Doc/lib/libfnmatch.tex
Fred Drake 295da24eaf New section header style.
Fix up a few synopses.
1998-08-10 19:42:37 +00:00

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1.6 KiB
TeX

\section{\module{fnmatch} ---
\UNIX{} shell style pathname pattern matching.}
\declaremodule{standard}{fnmatch}
\modulesynopsis{\UNIX{} shell style pathname pattern matching.}
This module provides support for \UNIX{} shell-style wildcards, which
are \emph{not} the same as regular expressions (which are documented
in the \module{re}\refstmodindex{re} module). The special characters
used in shell-style wildcards are:
\begin{list}{}{\leftmargin 0.5in \labelwidth 0.45in}
\item[\code{*}] matches everything
\item[\code{?}] matches any single character
\item[\code{[}\var{seq}\code{]}] matches any character in \var{seq}
\item[\code{[!}\var{seq}\code{]}] matches any character not in \var{seq}
\end{list}
Note that the filename separator (\code{'/'} on \UNIX{}) is \emph{not}
special to this module. See module \code{glob}\refstmodindex{glob}
for pathname expansion (\module{glob} uses \function{fnmatch()} to
match filename segments).
\begin{funcdesc}{fnmatch}{filename, pattern}
Test whether the \var{filename} string matches the \var{pattern}
string, returning true or false. If the operating system is
case-insensitive, then both parameters will be normalized to all
lower- or upper-case before the comparision is performed. If you
require a case-sensitive comparision regardless of whether that's
standard for your operating system, use \function{fnmatchcase()}
instead.
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{fnmatchcase}{filename, pattern}
Test whether \var{filename} matches \var{pattern}, returning true or
false; the comparision is case-sensitive.
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{seealso}
\seemodule{glob}{Shell-style path expansion}
\end{seealso}