if we want to filter with sed pattern and just print the filtered lines without any further editing , we can do it like this
ls -a1 ~ | sed -ne "/^./p"
This command will print all dir entries that starts with "."
ls -a1 ~ | sed -ne "/^./p" | sed -ne "/bash/p"
I want to find meta files related to bash, so I got the result:
.bash_history
.bash_logout
.bashrc
we can view each file content by
ls -a1 ~ | sed -ne "/^./p" | sed -ne "/bash/p" | xargs -n 1 less
delete file and directories except "term.sh" and "test.cpp"
ls | sed -e "/^term.sh$/d" | sed -e "/^test.cpp$/d" | xargs -n 1 rm -rf
show contents of all status file in current directory tree
find . -iname status | xargs -n 1 less