Does any one know how to get a recursive directory listing in long format (showing owner, group, permission etc) without listing the files contained in the directories.
The following command also shows the files but I only want to see the directories.
ls -lrtR * (4 Replies)
This is what I have to do:
Display the full file name (including the full path) and file size of all files whose name (excluding the path) is exactly 3 characters long.
This is the code I have:
find / -printf "Name: %f Path: %h Size: %s (bytes)\n" 2>/dev/null | grep -E "Name: .{3,} Path" |... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to perl:
I need to write perl script to list all the files present in directory and mail should be come to my inbox with all the files present in that directory.
advanced thanks for valuable inputs.
Thanks
Prakash GR (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have been looking for a method to list file names as soon as they are created. I have used the following command :
find . -name "*.xml" -mmin -2 -exec ls --full-time {} \; | sort -k6
this finds all xml files created in the last 2 minutes and orders them by time. The problem is that... (7 Replies)
Hello,
When listing the file systems (using ls -ltr) , if the group names are longer the group name is getting truncated.
Can someone help with the script which would display the truncated group name?
I appreciate if someone could help in this regard. (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have lets say 10 files , I need to process them one by one.
So I need a command to get one file name at a time to process it into a variable
Example
Files
P1111.dat
P3344.dat
S344.dat
...
v_file_name = 'p111.dat' .. I will rename it to something after processing
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I want to display the file names and the record count for the files in the 2nd column for the files created today.
i have written the below command which is listing the file names. but while piping the above command to the wc -l command
its not working for me.
ls -l... (5 Replies)
Data files coming in different names in a file name called process.txt.
1. shipments_yyyymmdd.gz
2 Order_yyyymmdd.gz
3. Invoice_yyyymmdd.gz
4. globalorder_yyyymmdd.gz
The process needs to discard all the below files and only process two of the 4 file names available
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a .csv file that has ~600 columns and thousands of rows. I would like to create a numerical list of the column names (so that I can later easily select the columns I want to extract). The format that I would hope for is something like:
1 "ID"
2 "X"
3 "Y"
..
600 "Z"
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: aberg
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
colorprintn
COLORS(3) libbash colors Library Manual COLORS(3)NAME
colors -- libbash library for setting tty colors.
SYNOPSIS
colorSet <color>
colorReset
colorPrint [<indent>] <color> <text>
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color> <text>
DESCRIPTION
General
colors is a collection of functions that make it very easy to put colored text on tty.
The function list:
colorSet Sets the color of the prints to the tty to COLOR
colorReset Resets current tty color back to normal
colorPrint Prints TEXT in the color COLOR indented by INDENT (without adding a newline)
colorPrintN The same as colorPrint, but trailing newline is added
Detailed interface description follows.
Available colors:
Green
Red
Yellow
White
The color parameter is non-case-sensitive (i.e. RED, red, ReD, and all the other forms are valid and are the same as Red).
FUNCTIONS DESCRIPTIONS
colorSet <color>
Sets the current printing color to color.
colorReset
Resets current tty color back to normal.
colorPrint [<indent>] <color>
Prints text using the color color indented by indent (without adding a newline).
Parameters:
<indent>
The column to move to before start printing. This parameter is optional. If ommitted - start output from current cursor position.
<color>
The color to use.
<color>
The text to print.
colorPrintN [<indent>] <color>
The same as colorPrint, except a trailing newline is added.
EXAMPLES
Printing a green 'Hello World' with a newline:
Using colorSet:
$ colorSet green
$ echo 'Hello World'
$ colorReset
Using colorPrint:
$ colorPrint 'Hello World'; echo
Using colorPrintN:
$ colorPrintN 'Hello World'
AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com>
Gil Ran <gil@ran4.net>
SEE ALSO ldbash(1), libbash(1)Linux Epoch Linux