Gets the base name (the last component of the path) for a given #GFile.
If called for the top level of a system (such as the filesystem root
or a uri like sftp://host/) it will return a single directory separator
(and on Windows, possibly a drive letter).
The base name is a byte string (not UTF-8). It has no defined encoding
or rules other than it may not contain zero bytes. If you want to use
filenames in a user interface you should use the display name that you
can get by requesting the %G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_STANDARD_DISPLAY_NAME
attribute with g_file_query_info().
This call does no blocking I/O.
Return: string containing the #GFile's
base name, or %NULL if given #GFile is invalid. The returned string
should be freed with g_free() when no longer needed.
Gets the base name (the last component of the path) for a given #GFile.
If called for the top level of a system (such as the filesystem root or a uri like sftp://host/) it will return a single directory separator (and on Windows, possibly a drive letter).
The base name is a byte string (not UTF-8). It has no defined encoding or rules other than it may not contain zero bytes. If you want to use filenames in a user interface you should use the display name that you can get by requesting the %G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_STANDARD_DISPLAY_NAME attribute with g_file_query_info().
This call does no blocking I/O.
Return: string containing the #GFile's base name, or %NULL if given #GFile is invalid. The returned string should be freed with g_free() when no longer needed.