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Operating Systems Solaris correct usage of find's -prune option Post 302311748 by pludi on Wednesday 29th of April 2009 12:09:29 PM
Old 04-29-2009
No. A singular point always means exactly the current directory, just like '..' always means the parent directory, and never the content of it. It's the same as if you'd specify the absolute path: find sees the path, recognizes it as a directory (matching your criteria), knows that it shouldn't descend and moves on to the next path on the command line (none).

If it helps: think of directories as files, where the contents are other files (it's more or less like this for the filesystem). When you want to search the "content" you'll have to state that.
 

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SOELIM(1)						      General Commands Manual							 SOELIM(1)

NAME
soelim - interpret .so requests in groff input SYNOPSIS
soelim [ -Cv ] [ -Idir ] [ files... ] It is possible to have whitespace between the -I command line option and its parameter. DESCRIPTION
soelim reads files and replaces lines of the form .so file by the contents of file. It is useful if files included with so need to be preprocessed. Normally, soelim should be invoked with the -s option of groff. Note that there must be no whitespace between the leading dot and the two characters `s' and `o'. Otherwise, only groff interprets the .so request (and soelim ignores it). OPTIONS
-C Recognize .so even when followed by a character other than space or newline. -Idir This option may be used to specify a directory to search for files (both those on the command line and those named in .so lines). The current directory is always searched first. This option may be specified more than once, the directories will be searched in the order specified. No directory search is performed for files specified using an absolute path. -v Print the version number. SEE ALSO
groff(1) Groff Version 1.18.1 27 June 2001 SOELIM(1)
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