The question is:
What command would you use to list the text files in your fileAsst directory (using a relative path)?
The previous question was:
Give a command to list the names of those text files, using an absolute path to the fileAsst directory as part of your command.
The answer was:
~/UnixCourse/fileAsst/*.txt
I was wondering how I can list the files in this directory using a relative path. I've tried several commands including:
ls ~/UnixCourse/fileAsst/*.txt|awk -F"/" '{print $NF}'
(cd ~/UnixCourse/fileAsst/*.txt && ls )
and a bunch of others.
But it keeps telling me their invalid. I know it has to be a correct answer because others have gotten past this. But right now I'm stuck and extremely frustrated =(
UPDATE:
After going to the CS lab someone helped me figure out the problem. I needed to be in a certain working directory at first, and I wasn't. After switching to that directory all I needed was the command:
../UnixCourse/fileAsst/*.txt
and that took care of it for me. Thanks to everyone that helped and I hope this helps someone else.
/
, with the caveat that~
is a shorthand for an absolute path. So, if you are in your home directory,echo UnixCourse/fileAsst/*.txt
generates a list of relative names; so does(cd UnixCourse; echo fileAsst/*.txt)
or(cd UnixCourse/fileAsst; echo *.txt)
— all subject to the caveat that 'text files' are files with a name ending.txt
.ls -1 ~/UnixCourse/fileAsst/*.txt
?bash
: convert absolute path into relative path given a current directory, to name but two related questions.