Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

grep is used to search within a file to see if any line matches a given regular expression. However, I have this situation - I want to write a regular expression that will match the filename itself (and not the contents of the file). I will run this from the system's root directory, to find all those files that match the regular expression.

For example, if I want to find all VB form files that start with an "f" and end with .frm, I'll use the regular expression -

   "f[[:alnum:]]*\.frm"

Can grep do this? If not, is there a utility that would let me do this? Thanks.

share|improve this question

1 Answer

up vote 4 down vote accepted

You need to use find instead of grep in this case.

You can also use find in combination with grep or egrep:

$ find | grep "f[[:alnum:]]\.frm"
share|improve this answer
Thanks. It is really helpful. – CodeBlue Apr 18 '12 at 15:09

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.