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Date:      Wed, 4 Feb 2009 22:05:29 -0500
From:      Jaime <jaime@snowmoon.com>
To:        t-u-t <marshc187@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: shell commands - exclusion
Message-ID:  <ae4324ed0902041905p4497c155u5d474533bbd5151f@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <332f78510902040635k6675a9b6u434879b42c66a579@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <332f78510902040635k6675a9b6u434879b42c66a579@mail.gmail.com>

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On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 9:35 AM, t-u-t <marshc187@gmail.com> wrote:
> if i have say one (or even two) single file/directories among many others,
> and i want to perform any said function like cp, mv, rm, etc.. , to all
> other files except that one or two, is there a way to do that in a single
> command?
> e.g
> rm -r * {-except foo1 foo15}

I'm just shooting in the dark here, but what about this?

ls | grep -v foo1 | grep -v foo15 | xargs rm -rf

Remember the Unix "pipe" and the grep and xargs commands.  It can
solve a lot of things by stringing together a lot of smaller commands.
 I think that this might be one of those situations.

Good luck,
Jaime


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