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Make a glob pattern absolute, ensuring that negative globs and patterns with trailing slashes are correctly handled.

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gulpjs/to-absolute-glob

 
 

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@gulpjs/to-absolute-glob

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Make a glob pattern absolute, ensuring that negative globs and patterns with trailing slashes are correctly handled.

Usage

var toAbsoluteGlob = require('@gulpjs/to-absolute-glob');

// All these assume your cwd is `/dev/foo/`

toAbsoluteGlob('a/*.js') === '/dev/foo/a/*.js';

// Makes a path absolute
toAbsoluteGlob('a') === '/dev/foo/a';

// Retains trailing slashes
toAbsoluteGlob('a/*/') === '/dev/foo/a/*/';

// Makes a negative glob absolute
toAbsoluteGlob('!a/*.js') === '!/dev/foo/a/*.js';

// Accepts a cwd
toAbsoluteGlob('a/*.js', { cwd: 'foo' }) === '/dev/foo/foo/a/*.js';

// Accepts a root path
toAbsoluteGlob('/a/*.js', { root: 'baz' }) === '/dev/foo/baz/a/*.js';

API

toAbsoluteGlob(glob, [options])

Takes a glob string and an optional options object and produces an absolute glob. If the glob is relative, the root or cwd option (or process.cwd() if neither specified) will be used as the base of the glob.

License

MIT

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Make a glob pattern absolute, ensuring that negative globs and patterns with trailing slashes are correctly handled.

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