Harold, that's perfect. Just what I needed! Thanks so much,
-- Dave Spencer, PageWeavers On Jun 30, 2010, at 3:16 PM, Harold Lee wrote: > Take 2: > > perl -n -e 'chomp; if(/([^ ]+)$/) { print "rm -f $1\n"; }' < > files-to-delete.txt > > -n will loop over the input lines like -p but it won't echo the input > lines. Chomp will remove the newlines. Adding the "if" makes sure we > don't print "rm -f" for empty lines or lines that don't match. > > Then you have your rm commands and you can scan them for correctness. > > Harold > > On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 3:13 PM, Harold Lee <har...@hotelling.net> wrote: >> If none of the filenames contain spaces(!), you can write a regexp to >> match the end of the line using the $ anchor, e.g. >> >> perl -p -e '/([^ ]+)$/; print "rm -f $1\n";' < files-to-delete.txt >> >> Harold >> >> On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 3:01 PM, David Spencer, Internet Handyman >> <spen...@pageweavers.com> wrote: >>> Guys, I'm sorry about asking this on the list; but I seem to have a mental >>> block when it comes to regular expressions. Here's what I'm trying to do: >>> >>> I have a lot of directories with a vast number of files, some of which I >>> wish >>> to delete based on the month they were created. I've built a file from some >>> full directory listings that has all the files I wish to delete. (Just go >>> with >>> me on this and don't suggest alternative methods of performing the task - >>> I'm >>> simplfying the job so it can be explained more easily.) >>> >>> A snippet of the file would look like this: >>> >>> -rw------- 1 auser auser 3.7K Apr 12 10:11 auser/folder/new/127109228.file >>> -rw------- 1 auser auser 16K Apr 12 12:32 auser/folder/new/127110076.file >>> >>> I would like to write either single-line perl command or a nano search and >>> replace to substitute the directory info and replace it with a file delete >>> so it would look like this: >>> >>> rm -f auser/folder/new/127109228.file >>> rm -f auser/folder/new/127110076.file >>> >>> Then I can just execute converted directory file as a shell script and >>> delete my files. But I'm having a brain-freeze on what a valid regex would >>> look like to match. Help?? >>> >>> Thanks again, >>> >>> >>> -- Dave Spencer, PageWeavers >>> _______________________________________________ >>> vox-tech mailing list >>> vox-tech@lists.lugod.org >>> http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech >>> >> > _______________________________________________ > vox-tech mailing list > vox-tech@lists.lugod.org > http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list vox-tech@lists.lugod.org http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech