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Re: Wrong command option in the manual examples


From: Greg Wooledge
Subject: Re: Wrong command option in the manual examples
Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2019 10:59:43 -0400
User-agent: Mutt/1.10.1 (2018-07-13)

On Mon, Sep 23, 2019 at 09:02:47PM +0700, Robert Elz wrote:
> There is no real standard for this - NetBSD has deprecated the -depth
> operator (which never really was one) and replaced it by a -d option
> which makes much more sense (-depth never really was the right way to
> do it).  -depth (the old way) is still supported for compat with old
> scripts, but is only mentioned in doc in the STANDARDS section, as:

But... there literally *is* a real standard for this.

<https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/find.html>

   -depth
      The primary shall always evaluate as true; it shall cause descent
      of the directory hierarchy to be done so that all entries in a
      directory are acted on before the directory itself. If a -depth
      primary is not specified, all entries in a directory shall be acted
      on after the directory itself. If any -depth primary is specified,
      it shall apply to the entire expression even if the -depth primary
      would not normally be evaluated.

If the POSIX standard isn't real enough, then I don't know what is.



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