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Full Discussion: wildcards in path
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers wildcards in path Post 302354283 by Corona688 on Thursday 17th of September 2009 04:24:24 PM
Old 09-17-2009
As I explained, shell globbing can't find things that don't exist yet.
Code:
$ mkdir a b c d
# a/q, b/q, c/q, d/q don't exist yet, so globbing won't work
$ touch [abcd]/q
touch: cannot touch `[abcd]/q':  No such file or directory
$ touch a/q b/q c/d q/q
# Since these files already exist, it will find them
$ touch [abcd]/q
$

But, as I also explained, globbing can find a directory. It can find ~/Library/Application/*.default, just not ~/Library/Application/*.default/file-I-want-to-create-but-does-not-yet-exist.
 

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GO-PACKAGES(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual					    GO-PACKAGES(7)

NAME
go - tool for managing Go source code DESCRIPTION
Many commands apply to a set of packages: go action [packages] Usually, [packages] is a list of import paths. An import path that is a rooted path or that begins with a . or .. element is interpreted as a file system path and denotes the package in that directory. Otherwise, the import path P denotes the package found in the directory DIR/src/P for some DIR listed in the GOPATH environment variable (see 'go help gopath'). If no import paths are given, the action applies to the package in the current directory. The special import path "all" expands to all package directories found in all the GOPATH trees. For example, 'go list all' lists all the packages on the local system. The special import path "std" is like all but expands to just the packages in the standard Go library. An import path is a pattern if it includes one or more "..." wildcards, each of which can match any string, including the empty string and strings containing slashes. Such a pattern expands to all package directories found in the GOPATH trees with names matching the patterns. As a special case, x/... matches x as well as x's subdirectories. For example, net/... expands to net and packages in its subdirectories. An import path can also name a package to be downloaded from a remote repository. Run 'go help remote' for details. Every package in a program must have a unique import path. By convention, this is arranged by starting each path with a unique prefix that belongs to you. For example, paths used internally at Google all begin with 'google', and paths denoting remote repositories begin with the path to the code, such as 'code.google.com/p/project'. As a special case, if the package list is a list of .go files from a single directory, the command is applied to a single synthesized pack- age made up of exactly those files, ignoring any build constraints in those files and ignoring any other files in the directory. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others). 2012-05-13 GO-PACKAGES(7)
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