Reputation: 137574
Given a path and a certain section, how can I find the name of the folder immediately below that section?
This is hard to explain, let me give some examples. Suppose I am looking for the name of the folder below 'Dev/Branches'. Below are example inputs, with the expected results in bold
I am using C#
Edit: I suppose I could use the regex /Dev/Branches/(.*?)/
capturing the first group, but is there a neater solution without regex? That regex would fail on the second case, anyway.
Upvotes: 0
Views: 662
Reputation: 137574
I went with this
public static string GetBranchName(string path, string prefix)
{
string folder = Path.GetDirectoryName(path);
// Walk up the path until it ends with Dev\Branches
while (!String.IsNullOrEmpty(folder) && folder.Contains(prefix))
{
string parent = Path.GetDirectoryName(folder);
if (parent != null && parent.EndsWith(prefix))
return Path.GetFileName(folder);
folder = parent;
}
return null;
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3417
Here's the code that will do exactly what you expect:
public static string GetSubdirectoryFromPath(string path, string parentDirectory, bool ignoreCase = true)
{
// 1. Standarize the path separators.
string safePath = path.Replace("/", @"\");
string safeParentDirectory = parentDirectory.Replace("/", @"\").TrimEnd('\\');
// 2. Prepare parentDirectory to use in Regex.
string directory = Regex.Escape(safeParentDirectory);
// 3. Find the immediate subdirectory to parentDirectory.
Regex match = new Regex(@"(?:|.+)" + directory + @"\\([^\\]+)(?:|.+)", ignoreCase ? RegexOptions.IgnoreCase : RegexOptions.None);
// 4. Return the match. If not found, it returns null.
string subDirectory = match.Match(safePath).Groups[1].ToString();
return subDirectory == "" ? null : subDirectory;
}
A test code:
void Test()
{
string path1 = @"C:\Code\Dev\Branches\Latest\bin\abc.dll";
string path2 = @"C:\Dev\Branches\5.1";
string path3 = @"D:\My Documents\Branches\7.0\Source\test.cs";
Console.WriteLine("Matches:");
Console.WriteLine(GetSubdirectoryFromPath(path1, "dev/branches/") ?? "Not found");
Console.WriteLine(GetSubdirectoryFromPath(path1, @"Dev\Branches") ?? "Not found");
Console.WriteLine(GetSubdirectoryFromPath(path3, "D:/My Documents/Branches") ?? "Not found");
// Incorrect parent directory.
Console.WriteLine(GetSubdirectoryFromPath(path2, "My Documents") ?? "Not found");
// Case sensitive checks.
Console.WriteLine(GetSubdirectoryFromPath(path3, @"My Documents\Branches", false) ?? "Not found");
Console.WriteLine(GetSubdirectoryFromPath(path3, @"my Documents\Branches", false) ?? "Not found");
// Output:
//
// Matches:
// Latest
// Latest
// 7.0
// Not found
// 7.0
// Not found
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 23113
// starting path
string path = @"C:\Code\Dev\Branches\Latest\bin\abc.dll";
// search path
string search = @"Dev\Branches";
// find the index of the search criteria
int idx = path.IndexOf(search);
// determine whether to exit or not
if (idx == -1 || idx + search.Length >= path.Length) return;
// get the substring AFTER the search criteria, split it and take the first item
string found = path.Substring(idx + search.Length).Split("\\".ToCharArray(), StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).First();
Console.WriteLine(found);
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 151584
Break it down into smaller steps and you can solve this yourself:
Path.GetDirectoryName(string)
Directory.GetParent(string)
.This comes down to;
var directory = Path.GetDirectoryName(input);
var parentDirectory = Directory.GetParent(directory);
The supplied C:\Dev\Branches\5.1
-> 5.1
does not conform to your specification, that is the directory name of the input path itself. This will output Branches
.
Upvotes: 0