I've tried 'find -name .html$', 'find -name .html\>'.
None worked.
I'd like to know why these two are wrong and what's the right one to use with no wildcards?
What you needed was
find -name '*.html'
Or for regex:
find -regex '.*/.*\.html'
To ignore case, use -iname or -iregex:
find -iname '*.html'
find -iregex '.*/.*\.html'
Manual for -name:
-name pattern
Base of file name (the path with the leading directories
removed) matches shell pattern pattern. The metacharacters
(`*', `?', and `[]') match a `.' at the start of the base name
(this is a change in findutils-4.2.2; see section STANDARDS CON‐
FORMANCE below). To ignore a directory and the files under it,
use -prune; see an example in the description of -path. Braces
are not recognised as being special, despite the fact that some
shells including Bash imbue braces with a special meaning in
shell patterns. The filename matching is performed with the use
of the fnmatch(3) library function. Don't forget to enclose
the pattern in quotes in order to protect it from expansion by
the shell.
find . -name '*.html'
You have to single quote the wildcard to keep the shell from globbing it when passing it to find.
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