i hate this kind of thing. The problem is that ./foo and foo are the same file. More confusingly, ~/foo and foo are the same (if you are in your home directory). Unless we do a stat and compare the inode fields we'll never get it totally right, and then people will get a false sense of security for the times we don't check. So, sorry, no. I feel your pain; I once did "rm *.o" but put a space before the .o part.
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