I've renamed some files in a fairly large project and want to remove the .pyc files they've left behind. I tried the bash script:
rm -r *.pyc
But that doesn't recurse through the folders as I thought it would, what am I doing wrong?
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I've renamed some files in a fairly large project and want to remove the .pyc files they've left behind. I tried the bash script:
But that doesn't recurse through the folders as I thought it would, what am I doing wrong? |
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Surely the simplest? |
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if you're using bash >=4.0 (or zsh)
(the globstar shell options must be enabled) |
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The find recursively looks for *.pyc files. The xargs takes that list of names and sends it to rm. The -print0 and the -0 tell the two commands to seperate the filenames with null characters. This allows it to work correctly on files containing spaces, and even a file containing a new line. The solution with -exec works, but it spins up a new copy of rm for every file. On a slow system or with a great many files, that'll take too long. You could also add a couple more args:
iname adds case insensitivity, like *.PYC . The no-run-if-empty keeps you from getting an error from rm if you have no such files. |
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Just to throw another variant into the mix, you can also use backquotes like this:
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In current version of debian you have Usage is simple:
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full recursive
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rmwill be called with arguments [-r, a.pyc, b.pyc]. – ephemient Apr 24 '09 at 19:34