For counting the number of files in directory i know two methods
first one ls -l file* |wc -l
second one find file* -type f -maxdepth 1 | wc -l
which one is more relibale and correct one?
1 Answer
Prefer the find
option, but use -name 'file*'
(in single quotes), as in
find . -maxdepth 1 -name 'file*' -type f | wc -l
This will avoid globbing, as both examples above I believe may run into a max args limitation.
`/home/charles/data/Study$ find . -maxdepth 1 -name CL* -type f | wc -l
bash: /usr/bin/find: Argument list too long
`/home/charles/data/Study$ find . -maxdepth 1 -name `CL*` -type f | wc -l
318480
There is no such solution for ls
, so find
is slightly more dependable. This is all dictated by ARG_MAX, as in:
`/home/charles/data/Study$ getconf ARG_MAX
2097152 # in bytes
ls file* | wc -l
. It feels more efficient. Note - that is a "opinion", which is not a good thing on SO. We should have hard data. But I'm not sure what metric you want to apply "more reliable and correct". By what measure?ls
includes directories and symlinks while thefind
does not. And thefind
includes hidden files while thels
does not.