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Full Discussion: find command listing
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting find command listing Post 302722051 by Don Cragun on Friday 26th of October 2012 09:30:16 AM
Old 10-26-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by radoulov
Quote:
Originally Posted by Don Cragun
[...]
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.
[...]
Just to add that GNU find defaults to the current directory if no path(s) is/are given (man 1 find):

Code:
$ find --version
GNU find version 4.2.27

Code:
OPTIONS
       The  '-H', '-L' and '-P' options control the treatment of symbolic links.  Command-line arguments following these
       are taken to be names of files or directories to be examined, up to the first argument that begins with '-', '(',
       ')', ',', or '!'.  That argument and any following arguments are taken to be the expression describing what is to
       be searched for.  If no paths are given, the current directory is used.  If no expression is given,  the  expres-
       sion '-print' is used (but you should probably consider using '-print0' instead, anyway).

Thanks for the information.

I perform the vast majority of my programming on OS X, so running the commandman 1 findwill not provide the text that you quoted from the find man page you'll find on a Linux system.

For the record, on OS X (and I imagine on BSD and most UNIX-branded systems) that command line writes diagnostic messages similar to:
Code:
find: illegal option -- n
find: illegal option -- a
find: illegal option -- m
find: illegal option -- e
find: *.WAV: No such file or directory

to standard error and exits with exit code 1.
 

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fslint-gui(1)							   User Commands						     fslint-gui(1)

NAME
fslint-gui - A GUI wrapper for the individual fslint command line tools SYNOPSIS
fslint-gui [OPTIONS] [PATHS] DESCRIPTION
fslint is a toolset to find various problems with filesystems, including duplicate files and problematic filenames etc. Individual command line tools are available in addition to the GUI and to access them, one can change to, or add to $PATH the /usr/share/fslint/fslint directory on a standard install. Each of these commands in that directory have a --help option which further details its parameters. findup - find DUPlicate files findnl - find Name Lint (problems with filenames) findu8 - find filenames with invalid utf8 encoding findbl - find Bad Links (various problems with symlinks) findsn - find Same Name (problems with clashing names) finded - find Empty Directories findid - find files with dead user IDs findns - find Non Stripped executables findrs - find Redundant Whitespace in files findtf - find Temporary Files findul - find possibly Unused Libraries zipdir - Reclaim wasted space in ext2 directory entries PARAMETERS
If [PATHS] are specified, they become the default search path, otherwise the current directory becomes the default. --version Display the fslint version and exit --help Display help for tool specific options AUTHOR
Written by Padraig Brady REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <P@draigBrady.com>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2000-2009 Padraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MER- CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details, which is available at www.gnu.org fslint July 2009 fslint-gui(1)
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