The trouble with your original attempt:
find www/*.html -type f -exec sh -c "echo $(basename {})" ;
is that the $(basename {})
code is executed once, before the find
command is executed. The output of the single basename
is {}
since that is the basename of {}
as a filename. So, the command that is executed by find is:
sh -c "echo {}"
for each file found, but find
actually substitutes the original (unmodified) file name each time because the {}
characters appear in the string to be executed.
If you wanted it to work, you could use single quotes instead of double quotes:
find www/*.html -type f -exec sh -c 'echo $(basename {})' ;
However, making echo
repeat to standard output what basename
would have written to standard output anyway is a little pointless:
find www/*.html -type f -exec sh -c 'basename {}' ;
and we can reduce that still further, of course, to:
find www/*.html -type f -exec basename {} ;
Could you also explain the difference between single quotes and double quotes here?
This is routine shell behaviour. Let's take a slightly different command (but only slightly — the names of the files could be anywhere under the www
directory, not just one level down), and look at the single-quote (SQ) and double-quote (DQ) versions of the command:
find www -name '*.html' -type f -exec sh -c "echo $(basename {})" ; # DQ
find www -name '*.html' -type f -exec sh -c 'echo $(basename {})' ; # SQ
The single quotes pass the material enclosed direct to the command. Thus, in the SQ command line, the shell that launches find
removes the enclosing quotes and the find
command sees its $9
argument as:
echo $(basename {})
because the shell removes the quotes. By comparison, the material in the double quotes is processed by the shell. Thus, in the DQ command line, the shell (that launches find
— not the one launched by find
) sees the $(basename {})
part of the string and executes it, getting back {}
, so the string it passes to find
as its $9
argument is:
echo {}
Now, when find
does its -exec
action, in both cases it replaces the {}
by the filename that it just found (for sake of argument, www/pics/index.html
). Thus, you get two different commands being executed:
sh -c 'echo $(basename www/pics/index.html)' # SQ
sh -c "echo www/pics/index.html" # DQ
There's a (slight) notational cheat going on there — those are the equivalent commands that you'd type at the shell. The $2
of the shell that is launched actually has no quotes in it in either case — the launched shell does not see any quotes.
As you can see, the DQ command simply echoes the file name; the SQ command runs the basename
command and captures its output, and then echoes the captured output. A little bit of reductionist thinking shows that the DQ command could be written as -print
instead of using -exec
, and the SQ command could be written as -exec basename {} ;
.
If you're using GNU find
, it supports the -printf
action which can be followed by Format Directives such that running basename
is unnecessary. However, that is only available in GNU find
; the rest of the discussion here applies to any version of find
you're likely to encounter.