Operating the Z-Shell
·392 words·2 mins
Table of Contents
This article is a summary of reasoniamhere.com/…/outrageously-useful-tips-to-master-your-z-shell/. The original article is from 2014 and the pages last entry is from 2015. In case the website goes down I want the important bits saved for my reading and learning pleasure 😉
None of the following commands on this page are my own.
File picking #
# list every file directly below the Sites folder
ls Sites
# list every file in the folders directly below the Sites folder
ls Sites/*
# list every file in every folder two levels below the Sites folder
ls Sites/*/*
# list every file anywhere below the Sites folder
ls Sites/**/*
# list every file that ends in .txt in every folder at any level below the Sites folder
ls Sites/**/*.txt
Glob operators #
# list text files that end in a number from 1 to 10
ls -l Sites/**/*<1-10>.txt
# list text files that start with the letter a
ls -l Sites/**/[a]*.txt
# list text files that start with either ab or bc
ls -l Sites/**/(ab|bc)*.txt
# list text files that don't start with a lower or uppercase c
ls -l Sites/**/[^cC]*.txt
Glob qualifiers #
# show only directories
print -l Sites/**/*(/)
# show only regular files
print -l Sites/**/*(.)
# show empty files
ls -l Sites/**/*(L0)
# show files greater than 3 KB
ls -l Sites/**/*(Lk+3)
# show files modified in the last hour
print -l Sites/**/*(mh-1)
# sort files from most to least recently modified and show the last 3
ls -l Sites/**/*(om[1,3])
ls -l Sites/**/*(.Lm-2mh-1om[1,3])
# you won't typically write at this level of obfuscation
ls -l Sites/**/*(. Lm-2 mh-1 om [1,3])
# this is more parseable, but unfortunately Zsh doesn't allow spaces
# between qualifiers, so you'll get an error
Read more in section 14.8.7 of the manual.
Modifiers #
Modifiers are preceded with a colon (:
).
# A plain old glob
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt
# Return the file name (t stands for tail)
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt(:t)
# Return the file name without the extension (r stands for remove_extension, I think)
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt(:t:r)
# Return the extension
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt(:e)
# Return the parent folder of the file (h stands for head)
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt(:h)
# Return the parent folder of the parent
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt(:h:h)
# Return the parent folder of the first file
print -l Sites/website/images/gif/*.txt([1]:h)
# Remember you can combine qualifiers and modifiers.