The Path interface was added to Java NIO in Java 7. The Path interface is located in the java.nio.file package, so the fully qualified name of the Java Path interface is java.nio.file.Path. A Java Path instance represents a path in the file system. A path can use to locate either a file or a directory.path of an entity could be of two types one is an absolute path and other is a relative path. The absolute path is the location address from the root to the entity while the relative path is the location address which is relative to some other path.
getFileName() method of java.nio.file.Path used to return the name of the file or directory pointed by this path object. The file name is the farthest element from the root in the directory hierarchy.
Syntax:
Path getFileName()
Parameters: This method accepts nothing.
Return value: This method returns the name of the file or directory pointed by this path object.
Below programs illustrate getFileName() method:
Program 1:
// Java program to demonstrate // java.nio.file.Path.getFileName() method import java.io.IOException; import java.nio.file.Path; import java.nio.file.Paths; public class GFG { public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException { // create object of Path Path path = Paths.get( "D:/workspace/AmanCV.docx" ); // call getFileName() and get FileName path object Path fileName = path.getFileName(); // print FileName System.out.println( "FileName: " + fileName.toString()); } } |
FileName: AmanCV.docx
Program 2:
// Java program to demonstrate // java.nio.file.Path.getFileName() method import java.io.IOException; import java.nio.file.Path; import java.nio.file.Paths; public class GFG { public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException { // create object of Path Path path = Paths.get( "D:/Resume.pdf" ); // call getFileName() and get FileName path object Path fileName = path.getFileName(); // print FileName System.out.println( "FileName: " + fileName.toString()); } } |
FileName: Resume.pdf
References: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/10/docs/api/java/nio/file/Path.html#getFileName()