I was messing around with the java.io.File methods today, and stumbled on something kind of weird.
When I rename a directory, I can't seem to ever delete the files or new directory.
File dir = new File("dir");
dir.mkdir();
File file = new File(dir, "afile.txt");
file.createNewFile();
File newname = new File(dir, "newName.txt");
file.renameTo(newname);
File newdir = new File("newdir");
dir.renameTo(newdir);
System.out.println("file exists? " + file.exists());
System.out.println("file deleted? " + file.delete());
System.out.println("newname exists? " + newname.exists());
System.out.println("deleted newname? " + newname.delete());
System.out.println("dir exists? " + dir.exists());
System.out.println("dir deleted? " + dir.delete());
System.out.println("newdir exists? " + newdir.exists());
System.out.println("deleted newdir? " + newdir.delete());
Yields the output:
file exists? false
file deleted? false
newname exists? false
deleted newname? false
dir exists? false
dir deleted? false
newdir exists? true
deleted newdir? false
In the filesystem, though, newdir and newname.txt both still exist!
However, if I comment out the renaming of the directory, the delete works fine.
Are there additional rules between delete() and rename() one needs to know about? There's not much in the javadoc.