Returns the file path from a file URI.
The returned path has either Windows or non-Windows semantics.
For non-Windows semantics the slash ("/") is used to separate path segments.
For Windows semantics the backslash ("\") separator is used to separate path segments.
If the URI is absolute the path starts with a path separator unless Windows semantics is used and the first path segment is a drive letter. When Windows semantics is used a host component in the uri in interpreted as a file server and a UNC path is returned.
The default for whether to use Windows or non-Windows semantics determined from the platform Dart is running on. When running in the standalone VM this is detected by the VM based on the operating system. When running in a browser non-Windows semantics is always used.
To override the automatic detection of which semantics to use pass
a value for windows
. Passing true
will use Windows
semantics and passing false
will use non-Windows semantics.
If the URI ends with a slash (i.e. the last path component is empty) the returned file path will also end with a slash.
With Windows semantics URIs starting with a drive letter cannot
be relative to the current drive on the designated drive. That is
for the URI file:///c:abc
calling toFilePath
will throw as a
path segment cannot contain colon on Windows.
Examples using non-Windows semantics (resulting of calling toFilePath in comment):
Uri.parse("xxx/yyy"); // xxx/yyy
Uri.parse("xxx/yyy/"); // xxx/yyy/
Uri.parse("file:///xxx/yyy"); // /xxx/yyy
Uri.parse("file:///xxx/yyy/"); // /xxx/yyy/
Uri.parse("file:///C:"); // /C:
Uri.parse("file:///C:a"); // /C:a
Examples using Windows semantics (resulting URI in comment):
Uri.parse("xxx/yyy"); // xxx\yyy
Uri.parse("xxx/yyy/"); // xxx\yyy\
Uri.parse("file:///xxx/yyy"); // \xxx\yyy
Uri.parse("file:///xxx/yyy/"); // \xxx\yyy/
Uri.parse("file:///C:/xxx/yyy"); // C:\xxx\yyy
Uri.parse("file:C:xxx/yyy"); // Throws as a path segment
// cannot contain colon on Windows.
Uri.parse("file://server/share/file"); // \\server\share\file
If the URI is not a file URI calling this throws UnsupportedError.
If the URI cannot be converted to a file path calling this throws UnsupportedError.
Source
// TODO(lrn): Deprecate and move functionality to File class or similar. // The core libraries should not worry about the platform. String toFilePath({bool windows});