On Jan 26, 2010, at 6:06 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:

> On 1/25/2010 8:49 AM, Chan Chung Hang Christopher wrote:
>> Anas Alnaffar wrote:
>>> I tried to run this command
>>> 
>>> find -name "*.access*" -mtime +2 -exec rm {} \;
>>> 
>> 
>> Should have been: find ./ -name \*.access\* -mtime +2 -exec rm -f {} \;
> 
> No difference.  If the path is omitted, current versions of find assume 
> the current directory, and double quotes are fine for avoiding shell 
> expansion of wildcards.  (But, I'm guessing the quotes were omitted on 
> the command that generated the error).

In my defense, I didn't realize that there were versions of find that didn't 
require a starting location.  And I've tended to remain with more standard 
versions of commands like this, since I've had to use too many stripped down 
systems through the years, plus I still use several different versions of Unix 
like systems.  Centos 5 does work without the path, but I wonder now when that 
was added to Linux?  OS X doesn't support that variant.  I don't know yet about 
Solaris.
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