454

Is there a Java equivalent for System.IO.Path.Combine() in C#/.NET? Or any code to accomplish this?

This static method combines one or more strings into a path.

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12 Answers 12

505

Rather than keeping everything string-based, you should use a class which is designed to represent a file system path.

If you're using Java 7 or Java 8, you should strongly consider using java.nio.file.Path; Path.resolve can be used to combine one path with another, or with a string. The Paths helper class is useful too. For example:

Path path = Paths.get("foo", "bar", "baz.txt");

If you need to cater for pre-Java-7 environments, you can use java.io.File, like this:

File baseDirectory = new File("foo");
File subDirectory = new File(baseDirectory, "bar");
File fileInDirectory = new File(subDirectory, "baz.txt");

If you want it back as a string later, you can call getPath(). Indeed, if you really wanted to mimic Path.Combine, you could just write something like:

public static String combine(String path1, String path2)
{
    File file1 = new File(path1);
    File file2 = new File(file1, path2);
    return file2.getPath();
}
11
  • 16
    Beware of absolute paths. The .NET version will return path2 (ignoring path1) if path2 is an absolute path. The Java version will drop the leading / or \ and treat it as a relative path.
    – finnw
    Feb 12, 2010 at 18:17
  • 8
    @Hugo: So it wastes a whole two objects? Shocking! Looks pretty clean to me, to be honest... it keeps the logic for relative file names where it belongs, in the File class.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 7, 2012 at 16:01
  • 1
    still, I'd argue that a constructor new File(String... pathElements) would be cleaner, possible with an added new File(File basepath, String... pathElements)
    – Martijn
    Jun 18, 2013 at 10:38
  • 2
    @modosansreves: Look at File.getCanonicalPath.
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 8, 2013 at 10:54
  • 1
    @SargeBorsch: Well C# is just a language. You could easily create your own equivalent of File in C# if you wanted to. (I'm assuming you mean the existence of File is a benefit, which I'd agree with.)
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 14, 2014 at 11:32
190

In Java 7, you should use resolve:

Path newPath = path.resolve(childPath);

While the NIO2 Path class may seem a bit redundant to File with an unnecessarily different API, it is in fact subtly more elegant and robust.

Note that Paths.get() (as suggested by someone else) doesn't have an overload taking a Path, and doing Paths.get(path.toString(), childPath) is NOT the same thing as resolve(). From the Paths.get() docs:

Note that while this method is very convenient, using it will imply an assumed reference to the default FileSystem and limit the utility of the calling code. Hence it should not be used in library code intended for flexible reuse. A more flexible alternative is to use an existing Path instance as an anchor, such as:

Path dir = ...
Path path = dir.resolve("file");

The sister function to resolve is the excellent relativize:

Path childPath = path.relativize(newPath);
4
  • "Note that while this method is very convenient, using it will imply an assumed reference to the default FileSystem and limit the utility of the calling code." Sure, but you have to use some equivalent function to generate a Path object (because it's an interface and can't be instantiated directly). So at some point you are creating a reference to the underlying FS. I think the docs are misleading here. Mar 12, 2022 at 0:41
  • 1
    @éclairevoyant They mean the reference will be to the default FS, rather than the FS that the parent path refers to. Unlike most OSes, Java supports multiple, separate filesystems. Eg, a zip file or cloud storage can be exposed as a FS object. It’s a cool, although not-widely-used-yet feature. Mar 14, 2022 at 8:20
  • All modern OSes should support multiple filesystems, but that's besides the point. If not Paths.get(...) how would one create a Path without using an existing Path? (Maybe this should be a new question.) Mar 14, 2022 at 14:08
  • 2
    @éclairevoyant FileSystem::getPath I should have said Java supports multiple FS namespaces (one per FS object). OSes have a single namespace. Mar 14, 2022 at 16:35
47

The main answer is to use File objects. However Commons IO does have a class FilenameUtils that can do this kind of thing, such as the concat() method.

2
28

platform independent approach (uses File.separator, ie will works depends on operation system where code is running:

java.nio.file.Paths.get(".", "path", "to", "file.txt")
// relative unix path: ./path/to/file.txt
// relative windows path: .\path\to\filee.txt

java.nio.file.Paths.get("/", "path", "to", "file.txt")
// absolute unix path: /path/to/filee.txt
// windows network drive path: \\path\to\file.txt

java.nio.file.Paths.get("C:", "path", "to", "file.txt")
// absolute windows path: C:\path\to\file.txt
18

I know its a long time since Jon's original answer, but I had a similar requirement to the OP.

By way of extending Jon's solution I came up with the following, which will take one or more path segments takes as many path segments that you can throw at it.

Usage

Path.combine("/Users/beardtwizzle/");
Path.combine("/", "Users", "beardtwizzle");
Path.combine(new String[] { "/", "Users", "beardtwizzle", "arrayUsage" });

Code here for others with a similar problem

public class Path {
    public static String combine(String... paths)
    {
        File file = new File(paths[0]);

        for (int i = 1; i < paths.length ; i++) {
            file = new File(file, paths[i]);
        }

        return file.getPath();
    }
}
12

To enhance JodaStephen's answer, Apache Commons IO has FilenameUtils which does this. Example (on Linux):

assert org.apache.commons.io.FilenameUtils.concat("/home/bob", "work\\stuff.log") == "/home/bob/work/stuff.log"

It's platform independent and will produce whatever separators your system needs.

0
6

Late to the party perhaps, but I wanted to share my take on this. I prefer not to pull in entire libraries for something like this. Instead, I'm using a Builder pattern and allow conveniently chained append(more) calls. It even allows mixing File and String, and can easily be extended to support Path as well. Furthermore, it automatically handles the different path separators correctly on both Linux, Macintosh, etc.

public class Files  {
    public static class PathBuilder {
        private File file;

        private PathBuilder ( File root ) {
            file = root;
        }

        private PathBuilder ( String root ) {
            file = new File(root);
        }

        public PathBuilder append ( File more ) {
            file = new File(file, more.getPath()) );
            return this;
        }

        public PathBuilder append ( String more ) {
            file = new File(file, more);
            return this;
        }

        public File buildFile () {
            return file;
        }
    }

    public static PathBuilder buildPath ( File root ) {
        return new PathBuilder(root);
    }

    public static PathBuilder buildPath ( String root ) {
        return new PathBuilder(root);
    }
}

Example of usage:

File root = File.listRoots()[0];
String hello = "hello";
String world = "world";
String filename = "warez.lha"; 

File file = Files.buildPath(root).append(hello).append(world)
              .append(filename).buildFile();
String absolute = file.getAbsolutePath();

The resulting absolute will contain something like:

/hello/world/warez.lha

or maybe even:

A:\hello\world\warez.lha
4

If you do not need more than strings, you can use com.google.common.io.Files

Files.simplifyPath("some/prefix/with//extra///slashes" + "file//name")

to get

"some/prefix/with/extra/slashes/file/name"
2

Here's a solution which handles multiple path parts and edge conditions:

public static String combinePaths(String ... paths)
{
  if ( paths.length == 0)
  {
    return "";
  }

  File combined = new File(paths[0]);

  int i = 1;
  while ( i < paths.length)
  {
    combined = new File(combined, paths[i]);
    ++i;
  }

  return combined.getPath();
}
1

This also works in Java 8 :

Path file = Paths.get("Some path");
file = Paths.get(file + "Some other path");
0
0

This solution offers an interface for joining path fragments from a String[] array. It uses java.io.File.File(String parent, String child):

    public static joinPaths(String[] fragments) {
        String emptyPath = "";
        return buildPath(emptyPath, fragments);
    }

    private static buildPath(String path, String[] fragments) {
        if (path == null || path.isEmpty()) {
            path = "";
        }

        if (fragments == null || fragments.length == 0) {
            return "";
        }

        int pathCurrentSize = path.split("/").length;
        int fragmentsLen = fragments.length;

        if (pathCurrentSize <= fragmentsLen) {
            String newPath = new File(path, fragments[pathCurrentSize - 1]).toString();
            path = buildPath(newPath, fragments);
        }

        return path;
    }

Then you can just do:

String[] fragments = {"dir", "anotherDir/", "/filename.txt"};
String path = joinPaths(fragments);

Returns:

"/dir/anotherDir/filename.txt"

0

Assuming all given paths are absolute paths. you can follow below snippets to merge these paths.

String baseURL = "\\\\host\\testdir\\";
String absoluteFilePath = "\\\\host\\testdir\\Test.txt";;
String mergedPath = Paths.get(baseURL, absoluteFilePath.replaceAll(Matcher.quoteReplacement(baseURL), "")).toString();

output path is \\host\testdir\Test.txt.

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