Globbing Patterns
When a command has an argument with a type of Globber
for a file path, that means you can use file globbing patterns to affect more than one file at a time. Globbing patterns are common in Bash as well as places like your .gitignore
file. They use common wildcard patterns to provide a partial path that can match zero or hundreds of files all at the same time.
"?" matches a single character
If a globbing pattern contains a question mark, that will match any single character. So a pattern of ca?.txt
would match car.txt
, and cat.txt
, but not cart.txt
. You can use a wildcard more than once. p?p?.cf?
would match files named papa.cfm
and pipe.cfc
.
"*" matches any number of characters within name
If a globbing pattern contains a single asterisks, that will match zero or more characters inside a filename or folder name. So d*o
matches doodoo
, dao
, and just do
. The wildcard only counts inside a file or folder name, so models/*.cfc
will only match cfc files in the root of the models folder.
"**" matches any number of characters across all directories
To extend the previous example, if we did models/**.cfc
that would match any cfc file in any subdirectory, no matter how deep.
Globbing examples
Here's some examples of what file globbing might look like:
Here's some more examples of how the wildcards work
Since the Globber library can handle more than one globbing pattern, any command that uses a Globber type can accept a comma-delimited list of patterns. The following will list any .cfm AND .md files in the directory.
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