As with most UNIX tools, this function will return the value of the
HOME environment variable if it is set to an existing absolute path
name, falling back to the passwd file in the case that it is unset.
If the path given in HOME is non-absolute, does not exist, or is
not a directory, the result is undefined.
Before version 2.36 this function would ignore the HOME environment
variable, taking the value from the passwd database instead. This was
changed to increase the compatibility of GLib with other programs (and
the XDG basedir specification) and to increase testability of programs
based on GLib (by making it easier to run them from test frameworks).
If your program has a strong requirement for either the new or the
old behaviour (and if you don't wish to increase your GLib
dependency to ensure that the new behaviour is in effect) then you
should either directly check the HOME environment variable yourself
or unset it before calling any functions in GLib.
Gets the current user's home directory.
As with most UNIX tools, this function will return the value of the HOME environment variable if it is set to an existing absolute path name, falling back to the passwd file in the case that it is unset.
If the path given in HOME is non-absolute, does not exist, or is not a directory, the result is undefined.
Before version 2.36 this function would ignore the HOME environment variable, taking the value from the passwd database instead. This was changed to increase the compatibility of GLib with other programs (and the XDG basedir specification) and to increase testability of programs based on GLib (by making it easier to run them from test frameworks).
If your program has a strong requirement for either the new or the old behaviour (and if you don't wish to increase your GLib dependency to ensure that the new behaviour is in effect) then you should either directly check the HOME environment variable yourself or unset it before calling any functions in GLib.
Return: the current user's home directory