There are two ways a path can be specified.
Absolute paths
Absolute paths always start with a /
. This means the starting point of the path specification is fixed. No matter where your current location is, an absolute path will always point to the same location. The only exception is when you use a shell shortcut, such as ~
, at the start, where the shell will replace ~
with what is usually the absolute path of your home directory. Even though it doesn't look like ~/bin
starts with a /
, when the shell presents its final form, it will have a leading /
.
Relative paths
Relative paths never start with /
. Their starting point is the current directory, so where you end up depends on where you start. They may start with any subdirectory. In addition:
- You can use
.
and ..
to refer to the current directory and the parent directory. You can also use these within absolute paths, just not at the start (/foo/../bar
is the same as /bar
, and both are absolute paths, but ../foo
is not absolute).
- You can use a setting (environment variable) called
CDPATH
(usually unset), specifically for the cd
command. If you add a directory to CDPATH
, then you can use a relative path (not starting with .
or ..
) to it from anywhere with cd
.
To summarize:
cd /usr/local/java
will always take you to the same spot, as does cd /usr/local/./java
.
cd java
will take you different places depending on where you are and what CDPATH
contains. (Note that only cd
should be affected by CDPATH
- for other commands, ./java
and java
should mean the same thing.)
cd ./java
will take you to the directory named java
within the current directory.
cd ../java
will take you to the directory named java
within the parent directory.
cd ~/java
will always take you to the directory named java
in your home directory. In this case, the path is absolute, but because the shell expands the ~
before cd
operates on it, different users will end up at different places.