Directly from this Java Oracle tutorial:
Two asterisks, **, works like * but crosses directory boundaries. This syntax is generally used for matching complete paths.
Could anybody do a real example out of it?
What do they mean with "crosses directory boundary"?
Crossing the directory boundary, I imagine something like checking the file from root to getNameCount()-1
.
Again a real example explaining the difference between * and ** in practice would be great.
The javadoc for FileSystem#getPathMatcher()
has some pretty good examples and explanations
*.java Matches a path that represents a file name ending in .java
*.* Matches file names containing a dot
*.{java,class} Matches file names ending with .java or .class
foo.? Matches file names starting with foo. and a single character extension
/home/*/* Matches /home/gus/data on UNIX platforms
/home/** Matches /home/gus and /home/gus/data on UNIX platforms
C:\\* Matches C:\foo and C:\bar on the Windows platform (note that the backslash is escaped; as a string literal in the Java Language the pattern would be "C:\\\\*")
So /home/**
would match /home/gus/data
, but /home/*
wouldn't.
/home/*
is saying every file directly in the /home
directory.
/home/**
is saying every file in any directory inside /home
.
Example of *
vs **
. Assuming your current working directory is /Users/username/workspace/myproject
, then the following will only match the ./myproject
file (directory).
PathMatcher pathMatcher = FileSystems.getDefault().getPathMatcher("glob:/Users/username/workspace/*");
Files.walk(Paths.get(".")).forEach((path) -> {
path = path.toAbsolutePath().normalize();
System.out.print("Path: " + path + " ");
if (pathMatcher.matches(path)) {
System.out.print("matched");
}
System.out.println();
});
If you use **
, it will match all folders and files within that directory.