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_makepath, _wmakepath

Create a path name from components.

void_makepath(char*path,constchar*drive,constchar*dir,constchar*fname,constchar*ext);

void_wmakepath(wchar_t*path,constwchar_t*drive,constwchar_t*dir,constwchar_t*fname,constwchar_t*ext);

Routine Required Header Compatibility
_makepath <stdlib.h> Win 95, Win NT
_wmakepath <stdlib.h> or <wchar.h> Win 95, Win NT

For additional compatibility information, see Compatibility in the Introduction.

Libraries

LIBC.LIB Single thread static library, retail version
LIBCMT.LIB Multithread static library, retail version
MSVCRT.LIB Import library for MSVCRT.DLL, retail version

Return Value

None

Parameters

path

Full path buffer

drive

Drive letter

dir

Directory path

fname

Filename

ext

File extension

Remarks

The _makepath function creates a single path and stores it in path. The path may include a drive letter, directory path, filename, and filename extension. _wmakepath is a wide-character version of _makepath; the arguments to _wmakepath are wide-character strings. _wmakepath and _makepath behave identically otherwise.

Generic-Text Routine Mappings

TCHAR.H Routine _UNICODE & _MBCS Not Defined _MBCS Defined _UNICODE Defined
_tmakepath _makepath _makepath _wmakepath

The following arguments point to buffers containing the path elements:

drive

Contains a letter (A, B, and so on) corresponding to the desired drive and an optional trailing colon. _makepath inserts the colon automatically in the composite path if it is missing. If drive is a null character or an empty string, no drive letter and colon appear in the composite path string.

dir

Contains the path of directories, not including the drive designator or the actual filename. The trailing slash is optional, and either a forward slash (/) or a backslash (\) or both may be used in a single dir argument. If a trailing slash (/ or \) is not specified, it is inserted automatically. If dir is a null character or an empty string, no slash is inserted in the composite path string.

fname

Contains the base filename without any extensions. If fname is NULL or points to an empty string, no filename is inserted in the composite path string.

ext

Contains the actual filename extension, with or without a leading period (.). _makepath inserts the period automatically if it does not appear in ext. If ext is a null character or an empty string, no period is inserted in the composite path string.

The path argument must point to an empty buffer large enough to hold the complete path. Although there are no size limits on any of the fields that constitute path, the composite path must be no larger than the _MAX_PATH constant, defined in STDLIB.H. _MAX_PATH may be larger than the current operating-system version will handle.

Example

/* MAKEPATH.C */

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>

void main( void )
{
   char path_buffer[_MAX_PATH];
   char drive[_MAX_DRIVE];
   char dir[_MAX_DIR];
   char fname[_MAX_FNAME];
   char ext[_MAX_EXT];

   _makepath( path_buffer, "c", "\\sample\\crt\\", "makepath", "c" );
   printf( "Path created with _makepath: %s\n\n", path_buffer );
   _splitpath( path_buffer, drive, dir, fname, ext );
   printf( "Path extracted with _splitpath:\n" );
   printf( "  Drive: %s\n", drive );
   printf( "  Dir: %s\n", dir );
   printf( "  Filename: %s\n", fname );
   printf( "  Ext: %s\n", ext );
}

Output

Path created with _makepath: c:\sample\crt\makepath.c

Path extracted with _splitpath:
  Drive: c:
  Dir: \sample\crt\
  Filename: makepath
  Ext: .c

File Handling Routines

See Also   _fullpath, _splitpath