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How does one implement an OR selection via regular expressions. For example, if I have the following files

/foo/bar/
├── foo1.txt
├── foo2.txt
├── foo3.txt
├── foo1.eps
├── foo2.eps
├── foo3.eps
├── foo1.pdf
├── foo2.pdf
└── foo3.pdf

and I want to specify that I want only the ones with 1 or 2 in them, I can do *[12]* like so

find . -name "*[12]*" -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec echo {} ";"

But what if I want more complex selection by only selecting the txt and eps files like so

find . -name "*[txt || eps]*" -type f -maxdepth 1 -exec echo {} ";"

Obviously the above example doesn't work, but what I mean is that I want an OR operator || here.

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1 Answer 1

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The -name patterns are not regexes. If they were, using | would work. What works, however, is using find's expression language to one's advantage. Like so:

find . -maxdepth 1 \( -name "*txt*" -o -name "*eps*" \) -type f -exec echo {} ";"

You use -o to form an or-expression and parentheses (escaped for the shell) for grouping.

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