Given an absolute path for a file (Unix-style), simplify it.
For example,
path = "/home/", => "/home"
path = "/a/./b/../../c/", => "/c"
path = "/a/../../b/../c//.//", => "/c"
path = "/a//b////c/d//././/..", => "/a/b/c"
In a UNIX-style file system, a period ('.') refers to the current directory, so it can be ignored in a simplified path. Additionally, a double period ("..") moves up a directory, so it cancels out whatever the last directory was. For more information, look here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Path_(computing)#Unix_style
Corner Cases:
Did you consider the case where path = "/../"?
In this case, you should return "/".
Another corner case is the path might contain multiple slashes '/' together, such as "/home//foo/".
In this case, you should ignore redundant slashes and return "/home/foo".
Solution1:
class Solution:
def simplifyPath(self, path):
"""
:type path: str
:rtype: str
"""
res = []
p = path.split('/')
for i in p:
if i=='' or i=='.':
continue
if i=='..':
if len(res):
res.pop()
continue
res.append(i)
return '/'+'/'.join(res) #join的用法
Solution2:
class Solution:
def simplifyPath(self, path):
"""
:type path: str
:rtype: str
"""
return os.path.realpath(path)