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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting find: "weird" regex behaviour Post 302490307 by Corona688 on Monday 24th of January 2011 01:33:57 PM
Old 01-24-2011
In POSIX regular expressions, modifiers like * need a character before them to describe what they're modifying. . is a special character meaning 'match any character'. So .* means 'match any number of any character'.

I don't think you should be putting the path inside the expression. I don't think the path is actually part of what gets matched. You can limit what directories it goes inside with mindepth and maxdepth, to limit it to ./ that would be -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1

If you use -name, you get behavior like you were expecting: find ./ -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -name 'oos*.txt'

-iname acts like -name but is case-insenstive. It may be unavailable depending on your system, though.
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REGEXP(6)							   Games Manual 							 REGEXP(6)

NAME
regexp - regular expression notation DESCRIPTION
A regular expression specifies a set of strings of characters. A member of this set of strings is said to be matched by the regular expression. In many applications a delimiter character, commonly bounds a regular expression. In the following specification for regular expressions the word `character' means any character (rune) but newline. The syntax for a regular expression e0 is e3: literal | charclass | '.' | '^' | '$' | '(' e0 ')' e2: e3 | e2 REP REP: '*' | '+' | '?' e1: e2 | e1 e2 e0: e1 | e0 '|' e1 A literal is any non-metacharacter, or a metacharacter (one of .*+?[]()|^$), or the delimiter preceded by A charclass is a nonempty string s bracketed [s] (or [^s]); it matches any character in (or not in) s. A negated character class never matches newline. A substring a-b, with a and b in ascending order, stands for the inclusive range of characters between a and b. In s, the metacharacters an initial and the regular expression delimiter must be preceded by a other metacharacters have no special meaning and may appear unescaped. A matches any character. A matches the beginning of a line; matches the end of the line. The REP operators match zero or more (*), one or more (+), zero or one (?), instances respectively of the preceding regular expression e2. A concatenated regular expression, e1e2, matches a match to e1 followed by a match to e2. An alternative regular expression, e0|e1, matches either a match to e0 or a match to e1. A match to any part of a regular expression extends as far as possible without preventing a match to the remainder of the regular expres- sion. SEE ALSO
awk(1), ed(1), sam(1), sed(1), regexp(2) REGEXP(6)
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