LLM docs

File

ReadErr : Path.ReadErr

Tag union of possible errors when reading a file or directory.

This is the same as [Path.ReadErr].

WriteErr : Path.WriteErr

Tag union of possible errors when writing a file or directory.

This is the same as [Path.WriteErr].

write : Str, val, fmt -> Task {} [FileWriteErr Path WriteErr] where val implements Encoding, fmt implements EncoderFormatting

Write data to a file.

First encode a val using a given fmt which implements the ability Encode.EncoderFormatting.

For example, suppose you have a Json.toCompactUtf8 which implements Encode.EncoderFormatting. You can use this to write JSON data to a file like this:

# Writes `{"some":"json stuff"}` to the file `output.json`:
File.write
    (Path.fromStr "output.json")
    { some: "json stuff" }
    Json.toCompactUtf8

This opens the file first and closes it after writing to it. If writing to the file fails, for example because of a file permissions issue, the task fails with WriteErr.

To write unformatted bytes to a file, you can use File.writeBytes instead.

Path.write does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

writeBytes : Str, List U8 -> Task {} [FileWriteErr Path WriteErr]

Writes bytes to a file.

# Writes the bytes 1, 2, 3 to the file `myfile.dat`.
File.writeBytes (Path.fromStr "myfile.dat") [1, 2, 3]

This opens the file first and closes it after writing to it.

To format data before writing it to a file, you can use File.write instead.

Path.writeBytes does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

writeUtf8 : Str, Str -> Task {} [FileWriteErr Path WriteErr]

Writes a Str to a file, encoded as UTF-8.

# Writes "Hello!" encoded as UTF-8 to the file `myfile.txt`.
File.writeUtf8 "myfile.txt" "Hello!"

This opens the file first and closes it after writing to it.

To write unformatted bytes to a file, you can use File.writeBytes instead.

Path.writeUtf8 does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

delete : Str -> Task {} [FileWriteErr Path WriteErr]

Deletes a file from the filesystem.

Performs a DeleteFile on Windows and unlink on UNIX systems. On Windows, this will fail when attempting to delete a readonly file; the file's readonly permission must be disabled before it can be successfully deleted.

# Deletes the file named
File.delete (Path.fromStr "myfile.dat") [1, 2, 3]

This does not securely erase the file's contents from disk; instead, the operating system marks the space it was occupying as safe to write over in the future. Also, the operating system may not immediately mark the space as free; for example, on Windows it will wait until the last file handle to it is closed, and on UNIX, it will not remove it until the last hard link to it has been deleted.

Path.delete does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

readBytes : Str -> Task (List U8) [FileReadErr Path ReadErr]

Reads all the bytes in a file.

# Read all the bytes in `myfile.txt`.
File.readBytes "myfile.txt"

This opens the file first and closes it after reading its contents.

To read and decode data from a file, you can use File.read instead.

Path.readBytes does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

readUtf8 : Str -> Task Str [ FileReadErr Path ReadErr, FileReadUtf8Err Path ]

Reads a Str from a file containing UTF-8-encoded text.

# Reads UTF-8 encoded text into a Str from the file "myfile.txt"
File.readUtf8 "myfile.txt"

This opens the file first and closes it after writing to it. The task will fail with FileReadUtf8Err if the given file contains invalid UTF-8.

To read unformatted bytes from a file, you can use File.readBytes instead.

Path.readUtf8 does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

isDir : Str -> Task Bool [PathErr MetadataErr]

Returns true if the path exists on disk and is pointing at a directory. Any error will return false. This uses rust's std::path::is_dir.

Path.isDir does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

isFile : Str -> Task Bool [PathErr MetadataErr]

Returns true if the path exists on disk and is pointing at a regular file. Any error will return false. This uses rust's std::path::is_file.

Path.isFile does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

isSymLink : Str -> Task Bool [PathErr MetadataErr]

Returns true if the path exists on disk and is pointing at a symbolic link. Any error will return false. This uses rust's std::path::is_symlink.

Path.isSymLink does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

type : Str -> Task [ IsFile, IsDir, IsSymLink ] [PathErr MetadataErr]

Return the type of the path if the path exists on disk. This uses rust's std::path::is_symlink.

Path.type does the same thing, except it takes a Path instead of a Str.

Reader

openReader : Str -> Task Reader [GetFileReadErr Path ReadErr]

Try to open a File.Reader for buffered (= part by part) reading given a path string. See examples/file-read-buffered.roc for example usage.

This uses rust's std::io::BufReader.

Use readUtf8 if you want to get the entire file contents at once.

openReaderWithCapacity : Str, U64 -> Task Reader [GetFileReadErr Path ReadErr]

Try to open a File.Reader for buffered (= part by part) reading given a path string. The buffer will be created with the specified capacity. See examples/file-read-buffered.roc for example usage.

This uses rust's std::io::BufReader.

Use readUtf8 if you want to get the entire file contents at once.

readLine : Reader -> Task (List U8) [FileReadErr Path Str]

Try to read a line from a file given a Reader. The line will be provided as the list of bytes (List U8) until a newline (0xA byte). This list will be empty when we reached the end of the file. See examples/file-read-buffered.roc for example usage.

This uses rust's BufRead::read_line.

Use readUtf8 if you want to get the entire file contents at once.