2009/4/14 Dragan Milić <mi...@mac.com>:
> Hell all,
>
> Let's suppose I've got NSString @"C:omponent" , which represents the name of
> a file. Is there a way to instruct NSString class not to treat a leading
> single letter followed by a column as a path separator? Namely, I need this
> one treated as only one path component @"C:omponent", but NSString sees two,
> @"C:" and "omponent". So, if I ask for the last path component, I get
> @"omponent" instead of the whole string @"C:omponent".
>
> I've searched documentation, took a look into NSPathUtilities.h, but no
> help.

As far as I can see, it only does this if that's at the beginning of
the string. If your string contains a full path, this doesn't happen.

One fix would be to make sure you only work with absolute paths. This
is generally a good idea anyway, since the working directory isn't
something you can count on being anything useful. Whether this is
practical depends on exactly what you're doing though.

Another fix would be to stick a / on the front before you make the
call to disable this behavior.

Or of course you could just parse the last path component yourself.

Mike
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