0

What is the correct way to use a wild card and a variable to delete many files? This is my variable "$dir"

$ echo "$dir"
/home/path/to/file

Here I have the wild card inside the double quotes, but it does not work:

$ rm "$dir/data/ffg_per_product/ffg*"
rm: cannot remove `/home/path/to/file/data/ffg_per_product/ffg*': No such file or directory

Here I have the wildcard outside the double quotes and it works:

$ rm "$dir/data/ffg_per_product/ffg"*

And here you can see the files were deleted:

$ ls -lth ffg_per_product/ffg* | wc -l
ls: cannot access ffg_per_product/ffg*: No such file or directory
0

So what I want to know, is am I using the quotes correctly to delete the files rm "$dir/data/ffg_per_product/ffg"* with the wildcard outise the quotes? Or is there another/better way?

NOTE: probably obvious to some but just for refererence and to be clear, the same applies for ls e.g. ls "$dir/data/ffg_per_product/NAME"* | wc -l, in that, does the wild card have to be outside the double quotes.

Charles Duffy
  • 280,126
  • 43
  • 390
  • 441
HattrickNZ
  • 4,373
  • 15
  • 54
  • 98
  • Related, with much more context in the answers; http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10067266/when-to-wrap-quotes-around-a-variable – tripleee Jul 27 '16 at 05:21

1 Answers1

3

A * outside of quotes is expanded by the shell to matching filenames.

A * inside quotes is not expanded, it is used literally, just a simple *.

This is correct and corresponds to your intention:

rm "$dir/data/ffg_per_product/ffg"*

The same goes for your other example with the ls command too, exactly the same reasoning.

janos
  • 120,954
  • 29
  • 226
  • 236