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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Output all files fitting the pattern Post 302677715 by FUTURE_EINSTEIN on Thursday 26th of July 2012 02:34:21 PM
Old 07-26-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by alister
Show us the entire script. That behavior would only occur if the argument to ls is quoted or if pathname expansion is disabled (very unlikely).
It is not a script it is just a pipe
Code:
-bash-3.2$ ls /tmp/?[0-9]* | sort -r
ls: /tmp/?[0-9]*: No such file or directory


Quote:
It has nothing to do with ^. It has to do with *, which means to allow zero or more matches of the preceding character (in this case, any digit, [[:digit:]]). It's the zero part that's important. If the second character is not a digit, that's equivalent to zero digits. If there is no second character at all, that's also equivalent to zero digits (which is why your pattern matches a filename of just 1 character).

Regards,
Alister
Thanks again!
I get your point so is there a way to say for example I want first character to be anything second digit and whatever length of string ??? or I should just do it like '^.[[:digit:]]' like that???
 

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ISWDIGIT(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						       ISWDIGIT(3)

NAME
iswdigit - test for decimal digit wide character SYNOPSIS
#include <wctype.h> int iswdigit(wint_t wc); DESCRIPTION
The iswdigit() function is the wide-character equivalent of the isdigit(3) function. It tests whether wc is a wide character belonging to the wide-character class "digit". The wide-character class "digit" is a subclass of the wide-character class "xdigit", and therefore also a subclass of the wide-character class "alnum", of the wide-character class "graph" and of the wide-character class "print". Being a subclass of the wide character class "print", the wide-character class "digit" is disjoint from the wide-character class "cntrl". Being a subclass of the wide-character class "graph", the wide-character class "digit" is disjoint from the wide-character class "space" and its subclass "blank". Being a subclass of the wide-character class "alnum", the wide-character class "digit" is disjoint from the wide-character class "punct". The wide-character class "digit" is disjoint from the wide-character class "alpha" and therefore also disjoint from its subclasses "lower", "upper". The wide-character class "digit" always contains exactly the digits '0' to '9'. RETURN VALUE
The iswdigit() function returns nonzero if wc is a wide character belonging to the wide-character class "digit". Otherwise, it returns zero. ATTRIBUTES
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7). +-----------+---------------+----------------+ |Interface | Attribute | Value | +-----------+---------------+----------------+ |iswdigit() | Thread safety | MT-Safe locale | +-----------+---------------+----------------+ CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, C99. NOTES
The behavior of iswdigit() depends on the LC_CTYPE category of the current locale. SEE ALSO
isdigit(3), iswctype(3) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
2015-08-08 ISWDIGIT(3)
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