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Full Discussion: find command listing
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting find command listing Post 302722021 by Don Cragun on Friday 26th of October 2012 08:04:00 AM
Old 10-26-2012
I said to run ls with the l (letter 'l', not digit '1') and f options with no operands. However, using either -1f or -lf will be fine. But, by specifying a globbing pattern as an operand to ls, the shell that invoked ls expanded *.WAV into a sorted list of filenames before calling ls. It will also work as I intended if you specify one or more operands that are the pathnames of files of type directory.

I repeat: run the command ls -lf(with no file operands) in a directory in which find reported .WAV files that were not in sorted order. It won't produce a listing of just .WAV files and it won't search subdirectories, but it will give you a listing of all files in that directory in unsorted directory order.

Also note that the find command you provided in your 1st posting on this thread:
Code:
find -name *.WAV

is using a non-standard extension I've never seen before. On standard versions of the find utility, the first argument to the find utility would have to be the name of a directory.

Since you didn't quote *.WAVI also have to assume that there were either no .WAV files or only one .WAV files in that directory. Otherwise, the shell would have expanded *.WAV and would have generated another syntax error in find.
 

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File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3) 			User Contributed Perl Documentation			   File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3)

NAME
File::Find::Rule::Procedural - File::Find::Rule's procedural interface SYNOPSIS
use File::Find::Rule; # find all .pm files, procedurally my @files = find(file => name => '*.pm', in => @INC); DESCRIPTION
In addition to the regular object-oriented interface, File::Find::Rule provides two subroutines for you to use. "find( @clauses )" "rule( @clauses )" "find" and "rule" can be used to invoke any methods available to the OO version. "rule" is a synonym for "find" Passing more than one value to a clause is done with an anonymous array: my $finder = find( name => [ '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ] ); "find" and "rule" both return a File::Find::Rule instance, unless one of the arguments is "in", in which case it returns a list of things that match the rule. my @files = find( name => [ '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ], in => $ENV{HOME} ); Please note that "in" will be the last clause evaluated, and so this code will search for mp3s regardless of size. my @files = find( name => '*.mp3', in => $ENV{HOME}, size => '<2k' ); ^ | Clause processing stopped here ------/ It is also possible to invert a single rule by prefixing it with "!" like so: # large files that aren't videos my @files = find( file => '!name' => [ '*.avi', '*.mov' ], size => '>20M', in => $ENV{HOME} ); AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
File::Find::Rule perl v5.18.2 2011-09-19 File::Find::Rule::Procedural(3)
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