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Full Discussion: find move
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting find move Post 63373 by bhargav on Thursday 24th of February 2005 03:48:06 PM
Old 02-24-2005
I have used the sed because i have used the '.' in the find command.
You may tweak your script based on what you have given in the find command.


Or run my script from where your code directory starts.
And i said before , i asssumes $PWD/code and the directories
under it are existing.

You may create those directories by following single command
if you know the directory structure beforehand.

mkdir -p ./code/dir1/dir2/dir3
 

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mkpath_np(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					      mkpath_np(3)

NAME
mkpath_np -- Auxiliary routine for efficiently creating paths SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int mkpath_np(const char * path, mode_t omode); DESCRIPTION
This routine allows the caller to create a path, including intermediate directories. It is equivalent to calling mkdir(1) with the -p com- mand line argument. Intermediate directories are created with permission bits of rwxrwxrwx (0777) as modified by the current umask, plus write and search permis- sion for the owner. The leaf directory is created with permission bits of omode as modified by the current umask. RETURN VALUES
A 0 return value indicates success. If an error occurs, the return value is a non-zero error code. Note that EEXIST is returned iff the leaf directory already exists and is a directory, so under certain circumstances, this error value may not indicate a failure state. This routine does NOT modify errno. ERRORS
Any error code that can be returned by mkdir(2) can be returned by mkpath_np(), but mkpath_np() will return the error code rather than set- ting errno. [ENOTDIR] A component of the path is not a directory (in contrast to mkdir(2) which returns this based on the path prefix rather than the path). [EEXIST] The path already exists and is a directory. HISTORY
This function first appeared in iOS 5.0. SEE ALSO
mkdir(1), chmod(2), mkdir(2) Mac OS X July 13, 2011 Mac OS X
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