10-06-2016
It depends where you are starting from. Perhaps you are starting at the wrong place with ls -l. Would you be better with cut the output from ls or ls -1? If you pipe ls to another command or into a file, they are equivalent anyway. They both give you just a list file/directory names you have run it against.
If you are getting a listing and trying to select the directories from it, that's different.
Can you tell us clearly what you are trying to achieve and we can probably suggest a selection of ways to do it, but it depends where you are starting and what output you have already.
If you could paste some samples into the thread wrapped in CODE tags then we can see what we are working with.
Kind regards,
Robin
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cut-diff
CUT-DIFF(1) Cutter's manual CUT-DIFF(1)
NAME
cut-diff - show difference between 2 files with color
SYNOPSIS
cut-diff [option ...] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
cut-diff is a diff command that uses diff feature in Cutter. It shows difference with color.
It's recommended that you use a normal diff(1) when you want to use with patch(1) or you don't need color.
OPTIONS
--version
cut-diff shows its own version and exits.
-c [yes|true|no|false|auto], --color=[yes|true|no|false|auto]
If 'yes' or 'true' is specified, cut-diff uses colorized output by escape sequence. If 'no' or 'false' is specified, cut-diff never
use colorized output. If 'auto' or the option is omitted, cut-diff uses colorized output if available.
The default is auto.
-u, --unified
cut-diff uses unified diff format.
--context-lines=LINES
Shows diff context around LINES.
All lines are shown by default. When unified diff format is used, 3 lines are shown by default.
--label=LABEL, -L=LABEL
Uses LABEL as a header label. The first--label option value is used as file1's label and the second --label option value is used
asfile2's label.
Labels are the same as file names by default.
EXIT STATUS
The exit status is 0 for success, non-0 otherwise.
TODO: 0 for non-difference, 1 for difference and non-0 for errors.
EXAMPLE
In the following example, cut-diff shows difference between file1 and file2:
% cut-diff file1 file2
In the following example, cut-diff shows difference between file1 and file2 with unified diff format:
% cut-diff -u file1 file2
SEE ALSO
diff(1)
Cutter February 2011 CUT-DIFF(1)