% File src/library/utils/man/filetest.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2009 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{file_test} \alias{file_test} \title{ Shell-style Tests on Files } \description{ Utility for shell-style file tests. } \usage{ file_test(op, x, y) } \arguments{ \item{op}{a character string specifying the test to be performed. Unary tests (only \code{x} is used) are \code{"-f"} (existence and not being a directory), \code{"-d"} (existence and directory) and \code{"-x"} (executable as a file or searchable as a directory). Binary tests are \code{"-nt"} (strictly newer than, using the modification dates) and \code{"-ot"} (strictly older than): in both cases the test is false unless both files exist.} \item{x, y}{character vectors giving file paths.} } \details{ \sQuote{Existence} here means being on the file system and accessible by the \code{stat} system call (or a 64-bit extension) -- on a Unix-alike this requires execute permission on all of the directories in the path that leads to the file, but no permissions on the file itself. For the meaning of \code{"-x"} on Windows see \code{\link{file.access}}. } \seealso{ \code{\link{file.exists}} which only tests for existence (\code{test -e} on some systems) but not for not being a directory. \code{\link{file.path}}, \code{\link{file.info}} } \examples{ dir <- file.path(R.home(), "library", "stats") file_test("-d", dir) file_test("-nt", file.path(dir, "R"), file.path(dir, "demo")) } \keyword{file}