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Timeline for Using `find` to find a file in PATH

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

13 events
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Aug 7 at 18:56 answer added Jim L. timeline score: 0
Jul 31 at 10:23 comment added terdon I added that you're using sh but since you're almost certainly not actually using the ancient bourne shell, it would be good if you could specify what /bin/sh is pointing to on your system.
Jul 31 at 10:21 history edited terdon CC BY-SA 4.0
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Jul 30 at 20:48 history became hot network question
Jul 30 at 18:24 comment added bballdave025 I believe this question is different enough, "as is", to merit keeping it open and non-duplicate. The OP specifically mentioned glob in this case. While the answers to the potential duplicate discuss glob in the answers, that other question doesn't mention globbing as part of the main goal. @umläute has made it an integral part of this question.
Jul 30 at 17:35 answer added bballdave025 timeline score: 7
Jul 30 at 15:20 review Close votes
Aug 4 at 3:03
Jul 30 at 15:00 comment added muru This question is similar to: How to find files with find tool in system path ($PATH)? Or alternatively, How to specify starting-point directory for find as an expression?. If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and/or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem.
Jul 30 at 14:45 vote accept umläute
Jul 30 at 14:01 answer added Chris Davies timeline score: 4
Jul 30 at 13:55 answer added Stéphane Chazelas timeline score: 18
Jul 30 at 12:53 answer added Stephen Kitt timeline score: 11
Jul 30 at 12:35 history asked umläute CC BY-SA 4.0