prompt-for-directory
message
&key
if-does-not-exist
pathname
file-package-is-directory
pane-args
popup-args
owner
continuation
use-file-dialog
=>
result, successp
A string.
One of :ok
, :prompt
or :error
.
A pathname, or nil
.
Arguments to pass to the pane.
Arguments to pass to the confirmer.
An owner window.
A function or nil
.
A generalized boolean.
The function prompt-for-directory
prompts the user for a directory pathname using a dialog box. Like all the prompters, prompt-for-directory
returns two values: the directory pathname and a flag indicating success. The
successp
flag will be nil
if the dialog was cancelled, and t
otherwise.
On Windows and Motif, if
if-does-not-exist
is :ok
, a non-existent directory can be chosen. When set to :prompt
, if a non-existent directory is chosen, the user is prompted for whether the directory should be created. When set to :error
, the user cannot choose a non existent directory. The default value of
if-does-not-exist
is :prompt
.
On Cocoa it is never possible to choose a non-existent directory, and the value of if-does-not-exist is ignored.
pathname
, if non-nil, supplies an initial directory for the dialog. The default value for
pathname
is nil
, and with this value the dialog initializes with the current working directory.
file-package-is-directory is handled as by prompt-for-file .
owner specifies an owner window for the dialog. See Dialogs: Prompting for Input for details.
If
continuation
is non-nil, then it must be a function with a lambda list that accepts two arguments. The
continuation
function is called with the values that would normally be returned by prompt-for-directory
. On Cocoa, passing
continuation
causes the dialog to be made as a window-modal sheet and prompt-for-directory
returns immediately, leaving the dialog on the screen. The with-dialog-results macro provides a convenient way to create a
continuation
function.
On Windows, when
use-file-dialog
is true (the default) and the "shell-objs"
module has been loaded (not the default), then the directory prompter looks like the standard file prompters.
use-file-dialog
is ignored on other platforms.
The prompt itself is created by passing an appropriate pane to popup-confirmer. Arguments can be passed to the make-instance
of the pane and the call to popup-confirmer using
pane-args
and
popup-args
respectively. Currently, the pane used to create the file prompter is internal to the CAPI.
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Unix version) - 3 Aug 2017