>> ~/ is just a macro, expanded by the shell (not all shells, if I
>> remember correctly).
>>
> Try using System.EnvironmentVariable("HOME") + whatever
...or SpecialFolder.Userhome.shellpath + whatever
...
It's more complex than that:
/xxx is an absolute path
./xxx is relative to the current directory
../xxx is relative to the parent directory
~/xxx is relative to YOUR home directory
~USER/xxx is relative to USER's home directory
Only the first is considered absolute.
Craig
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