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Full Discussion: Undeletable file
Operating Systems OS X (Apple) Undeletable file Post 303036945 by wisecracker on Thursday 18th of July 2019 01:23:59 PM
Old 07-18-2019
Hi...

On inspection the two NULL characters that you have shown us are unicode when hexdumped:
Code:
Last login: Thu Jul 18 16:34:33 on console
AMIGA:amiga~> hexdump -C <<< "␀␀Word Finder® Plus™"
00000000  e2 90 80 e2 90 80 57 6f  72 64 20 46 69 6e 64 65  |......Word Finde|
00000010  72 c2 ae 20 50 6c 75 73  e2 84 a2 0a              |r.. Plus....|
0000001c
AMIGA:amiga~> _

Have you tried the GUI dragging the file to the 'Trash' from within Finder, then clearing the Trash?
How about using single quotes instead of double?
How about mv '␀␀Word Finder® Plus™' /tmp/testname in single quotes and let the system remove it during reboot.
Are all the relevant permissions set for YOU to read and write from and to the file?
Remember any of these could cause problems so be very aware.
And finally are you absolutely sure you have the FULL filename and not missing, say, trailing spaces(s)?
That is all I can think of so far...
 

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GETUNIMAP(8)							       Linux							      GETUNIMAP(8)

NAME
getunimap - dump the unicode map for the current console to stdout SYNOPSIS
getunimap [ -s ] [ -C console ] DESCRIPTION
The getunimap program is old and obsolete. It is now part of setfont (1). The getunimap program outputs the unicode map (also called a "Screen Font Map") for the current console to standard output. The -C option may be used with Linux 2.6.1 and later to get the map for a console different from the current one. Its argument is a path- name. The output of getunimap is of the form 0xAA U+1234 # comment where 0xAA is the font character code and U+1234 is a unicode character, that if displayed, will be displayed using glyph 0xAA in the font. Many unicode characters may be mapped to the same glyph. the Hash symbol # is used as a comment delimiter; characters after a hash sign (to the end of the line) are comments. The -s option will sort and merge elements, sorting on font character. Hence, it will produce output of the form: 0x22 U+1234 U+5678 U+3456 0x23 U+0023 etc., listing the multiple unicode characters that map to a font glyph. The output of getunimap is of the form accepted by setfont and psfaddtable SEE ALSO
psfaddtable(1), setfont(1). Console Tools 2004-01-01 GETUNIMAP(8)
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