Mail Archives: cygwin/1999/01/04/11:26:41
On 03-Jan-1999, Hugh Winkler <hughw AT scoutsys DOT com> wrote:
> In b20.1 (bash 2.02.1(2), find 4.1) if I do
> find ./ -name *.java
>
> and there are some .java files in the current directory, find emits
>
> find: paths must precede expression
> Usage: find [path...] [expression]
>
> but if there are no .java files in the current directory, find behaves as
> expected.
>
> Same behavior for any search pattern, not just .java, of course.
>
> find was working properly in 20.0 I'm pretty sure.
The behaviour you describe above is the proper behaviour;
you can observe the same on Linux, for example.
If beta 20.0 behaved differently, that was a bug in beta 20.0.
To get the behaviour that you want, you need to quote the "*.java" argument:
find . -name "*.java"
^ ^
--
Fergus Henderson <fjh AT cs DOT mu DOT oz DOT au> | "Binaries may die
WWW: <http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/~fjh> | but source code lives forever"
PGP: finger fjh AT 128 DOT 250 DOT 37 DOT 3 | -- leaked Microsoft memo.
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