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If you need something still more general/powerful, in KornShell or [[BASH]] you can use ''extended globs''. In Bash, you'll need the {{{extglob}}} option to be set. It can be checked with: If you need something still more general/powerful, in KornShell or [[BASH]] you can use [[glob|extended globs]]. In Bash, you'll need the {{{extglob}}} option to be set. It can be checked with:
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For a more thorough explanation of extended globs, see [[glob]]. ----
CategoryShell

How can I use a logical AND/OR/NOT in a shell pattern (glob)?

"Globs" are simple patterns that can be used to match filenames or strings. They're generally not very powerful. If you need more power, there are a few options available.

If you want to operate on all the files that match glob A or glob B, just put them both on the same command line:

   1 rm -- *.bak *.old

If you want to use a logical OR in just part of a glob (larger than a single charcter -- for which square-bracketed character classes suffice), in Bash, you can use BraceExpansion:

   1 rm -- *.{bak,old}

If you need something still more general/powerful, in KornShell or BASH you can use extended globs. In Bash, you'll need the extglob option to be set. It can be checked with:

   1 shopt extglob

and set with:

   1 shopt -s extglob

To warm up, we'll move all files starting with foo AND not ending with .d to directory foo_thursday.d:

   1 mv foo!(*.d) foo_thursday.d

A more complex example -- delete all files containing Pink_Floyd AND not containing The_Final_Cut:

   1 rm !(!(*Pink_Floyd*)|*The_Final_Cut*)

By the way: these kind of patterns can be used with the KornShell, too. They don't have to be enabled there, but are the default patterns.


CategoryShell

BashFAQ/016 (last edited 2015-03-05 00:31:02 by izabera)