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Thanks Dennis,
I still can't make it work. Even if I start in root and give it the names of two directories I know to exist it comes straight back with nothing.
As I was in root I figured that maybe removing the leading "/" would be required. That certainly dind't come back right way - some 10 minutes later it still hadn't come back so I canned the shell session. I guess I'm just going to have to learn all this Unix c$%p because I need it more each day.
Thanks anyway - luckily Susan found what we were looking for by a more brute-force approach!
Jon Paris
www.Partner400.com
www.SystemiDeveloper.com
On 27-Sep-09, at 7:07 PM, midrange-l-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
So after that last reply I had a nice dinner, and came up with an
alternative that is more precisely what you requested:
Find . -type d | grep -i '/myDirName/mySubDirName/$'
This has the advantage that it is not subject to the imperfect
implementation of mixed-case support inherent to QSH (the -i flag sees to
that). Also, unlike the prior solution, it won't report false positives
(such as dir1/myDirName/x/y/mySubDirName). And finally (perhaps more
importantly), it makes you right about the need for grep. ;)
HTH
Dennis
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