As we know that ../ means one step back and / means the current place but i am confused about the ./ when working with my web site and found that. Can anyone explain ?
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1`.` is what means "the current directory", not `/`, so `./` is how you make a path that starts at the current directory and descends into a subdirectory. – Pointy Jan 09 '17 at 14:54
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http://www.coffeecup.com/help/articles/absolute-vs-relative-pathslinks/ – CodeGodie Jan 09 '17 at 14:55
4 Answers
. means this directory
.. means the parent directory
/ is the directory separator (for Linux/Unix)
When using include "file.php"; php will look in the current directory and in his configured include path for a file named file.php
When using include "./file.php"; php will look in the current directory (and only there) for a file named file.php
if you use include "../file.php"; php will look in the parent directory for a file named file.php
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./ - current directory.
/ - it is root directory (it used often for concatenating paths as directory separator, because previous path doesn't contain leading slash, for example host + '/' + cssFile).
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/represents the root of a folder structure. For a website, it's the root folder, where you would usually put the index.html of the landing page../represents the 'current' folder, relative with the current file. If you open the 'index.html' file in the root folder, then./will be the same as/. If you are in a subfolder of the root, like/css/for example, then./will be the same as/css/.../represents the parent folder. If you are in/css/, then../will be the same as/, the root folder.
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Lets say this is your working on a file called process.php in the following directory:
/app/form/process.php
The this is what those symbols mean:
/ = root directory, or in the example: /
./ = current directory, or in the example: /app/form/
../ = one directory back, in the example: app/
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1... and wrong. / is /, not /app, ./ is /app/form/, not /form/, and ../ is /app/, not /form – CCH Jan 09 '17 at 15:04
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