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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Maxdepth option of find command not working Post 302942093 by TomG on Friday 24th of April 2015 07:25:21 AM
Old 04-24-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by Don Cragun
The find -depth primary produces a post-order walk of the file hierarchy instead of the default pre-order walk; it has no effect on how deep find goes as it walks the hierarchy. To get what TomG requested, just using standard find primaries, try:
Code:
find . \( -type d ! -name . -prune \) -o \( -type f -size 0 -print \)

or if the name of the directory being searched was specified by a variable:
Code:
find "$dir" \( -type d ! -name "$dir" -prune \) -o \( -type f -size 0 -print \)


Hi Don,

Can you please tell me why -o is used. I am confused,because both conditions in the brackets have to be satisfied right. So can we use an 'and' condition.

Thank You
 

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Pod::Abstract::Filter::find(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation			  Pod::Abstract::Filter::find(3pm)

NAME
Pod::Abstract::Filter::find - paf command to find specific nodes that contain a string. DESCRIPTION
The intention of this filter is to allow a reduction of large Pod documents to find a specific function or method. You call "paf find -f=function YourModule", and you get a small subset of nodes matching "function". For this to work, there has to be some assumptions about Pod structure. I am presuming that find is not useful if it returns anything higher than a head2, so as long as your module wraps function doco in a head2, head3, head4 or list item, we're fine. If you use head1 then it won't be useful. In order to be useful as an end user tool, head1 nodes (...) are added between the found nodes. This stops perldoc from dying with no documentation. These can be easily stripped using: "$pa->select('/head1')", then hoist and detach, or reparent to other Node types. A good example of this working as intended is: paf find select Pod::Abstract::Node AUTHOR
Ben Lilburne <bnej@mac.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2009 Ben Lilburne This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-01-03 Pod::Abstract::Filter::find(3pm)
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