I have really no idea after reading glob (programming) of the results printed by following command in shell, I'm using (bash) as my shell. Given this directory hierarchy:
/sub2
s.py
t2.txt
nametoname.txt
bees.txt
/sub22
$ echo *[!t]*
bees.txt nametname.txt s.py sub22 t2.txt
In my understanding the arguments to echo will be expanded to match any filenames that don't contain the letter t, but the result was quite the opposite, why?
This command outputs all filenames that contain the letter t:
$ echo *[t]*
nametname.txt t2.txt
In the previous command I just negated [t] to [!t], then in my expectation it should do the opposite of the second command.
This glob:
echo *[!t]*
Will find any filename that at least one non-t character in it.
So, If you have filenames as t, tt, ttt then those filenames won't be listed using this glob.
Solution:
If you want to list filenames that don't have letter t in it then you can use this find command:
find . -maxdepth 1 -mindepth 1 -not -name '*t*'
You may also add -type f for listing files only or -type d for listing directories only.
As other answers have given, *[!t]* returns files with any non-t character.
What they haven't yet provided is a workaround:
shopt -s extglob ## enable extglobs
echo !(*t*) ## list files with names not containing t
See http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/syntax/pattern#extended_pattern_language
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