1

I've have directory structure like :

a
|-- b
|   |-- qfq.txt
|   |-- ewfw.txt
|   | ...
|
|-- c
|   |-- wgfw.txt
|   |-- wjkh.txt
|   | ...
| ...

I need to gitignore all txt files in a/*/ . I tried /a/*/*.txt and /a/**/*.txt, but they don't work.

Please help. Thank you.



Updated : Solved

/a/**/*.txt works. Also, I came to know that git doesn't commit empty folders, not knowing which I thought the commands not working properly.

Thanks @JonathonReinhar, @phd, pankaj for quick response.

6
  • Why not use additional .gitignore files in those directories? It's much simpler. Jan 19, 2020 at 13:13
  • In what way they don't work? Were the files already committed?
    – phd
    Jan 19, 2020 at 13:22
  • @JonathonReinhart Yes. This will be simpler. The reason I'm avoiding this is because the above structure is quite redundant in my project structure and I was thinking of a central control on gitignore. Jan 19, 2020 at 13:34
  • @phd The files were not committed. On including /a/*/*.txt or /a/**/*.txt in .gitignore, it stops tracking txts at /a/* which is right. But, suppose when I push this structure to remote repo, it should push /a/* without containing txt files, which is not happening here. If a directory is empty after ignoring txts, it doesn't push directories to remote repo. Jan 19, 2020 at 14:04
  • git doesn't track empty directories. See stackoverflow.com/q/115983/7976758
    – phd
    Jan 19, 2020 at 14:14

1 Answer 1

1

adding this in your .gitignore should do -

$ cat .gitignore 
a/**/*.txt

Check this, I created the same directory and files structure

$ find . -name *.txt 
./a/c/wjkh.txt
./a/c/wgfw.txt
./a/b/qfq.txt
./a/b/ewfw.txt

but my "git status" is clean

$ git status
On branch master
nothing to commit, working tree clean

Make sure you first commit the .gitignore to the repo then only it will start ignoring files.

Hope this helps

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