If you want users to be able to pass file globbing patterns to your command, set a type of Globber
for the argument.
Even though the user types a string, CommandBox will hand you a CFC instance that's preloaded with the matching paths and has some nice methods to help you interact with the matching paths. The Globber object lazy loads the matches, which gives you time to affect the pattern or even the sort if you wish prior to the file system actually being hit.
Use the count()
method to get the total number of paths matched on the file system.
The easiest way to apply some processing to each of the file paths found is by passing a closure to the apply()
method. The closure will be executed once for each result.
To get the raw results back, use the matches()
method.
If you want to get the results back as a query object, use the asQuery()
method and then you can loop over them yourself. The query contents match what comes back from directoryList()
.
If you want to get the results back as an array, use the asArray()
method and then you can loop over them yourself.
Affect the order that the results come back by setting a sort. The sort follows the same pattern as the directoryList() function, which means it can be a comma-delimited list of columns to sort on.
To get the original globbing pattern that the user typed, use the getPattern()
method on the Globber CFC.