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Let's assume I have a group of files "aab.md", "aac.md", "aad.md" ... "csdw.md". Content/filenames are actually in (non-latin) utf-8. They can be sorted alphabetically.

How can I get in Bash a subset of those files starting with e.g. "aad.md" and upwards?

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  • If you sort the full paths to the files, are they still sorted correctly?
    – choroba
    Nov 7, 2018 at 9:42
  • Isn't a simple use of the name filter the find utility offers suitable?
    – arkascha
    Nov 7, 2018 at 9:43
  • @jww - edited, please, remove [on hold]. Nov 8, 2018 at 12:10

1 Answer 1

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declare -a files
while IFS=  read -r -d $'\0' file; do
  filename=${file##*/}
  if [[ ! "$filename" < "aad.md" ]]
  then
    files=("${files[@]}" "$file")
  fi
done < <(find . -name "*.md" -print0)

The array "${files[@]}" should now contain paths to files whose basename is greater than aad.md.

This uses a number of less well-known techniques in bash: arrays, prefix substitution, zero-terminated records (and their reading), and process substitution; so don't hesitate to ask if something is unclear.

Note that bash [[...]] construct doesn't know about >= operator, so we need to improvise with ! ...<....

This is almost pure bash, no external commands except find. If you accept external commands, $(basename $file) is more obvious than ${file##*/}, but at that point you might as well use awk... and if you can use awk, why not Ruby?

ruby -e "puts Dir['**/*.md'].select{|x| File.basename(x) >= 'aad.md'}"

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