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linux - What does -prune option in find do?

I can see the -prune of find not working correctly. I guess -name "efence*" -prune option should select (or find) all files except the one with name efence* right?

Or am i wrong in my understanding?

The command i executed: find * -maxdepth 0 -name "efence*" -prune

Expectation: Select all files at current directory (maxdepth 0) except one with name *efence.

Please help me to understand -prune

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Try

find * -maxdepth 0 -name "efence*" -prune -o -print

The prune option does print matching files, if no other options are specified (it still prevents find from recursing into matching directories, however).

Edited to add explanation:

find expressions distinguish between tests and actions. From man find:

The expression is made up of options (which affect overall operation rather than the processing of a specific file, and always return true), tests (which return a true or false value), and actions (which have side effects and return a true or false value), all separated by operators. -and is assumed where the operator is omitted.

If the expression contains no actions other than -prune, -print is performed on all files for which the expression is true. [my emphasis]

So -prune is an action which has the side effect that find will not recurse into subdirectories which match the preceding test (in your case, -maxdepth 0 -name "efence*"). But in terms of the truth-value of the expression, it's equivalent to just having

find * -maxdepth 0 -name "efence*" -true

and since you didn't specify any other action, -print is assumed (this assumption is always present as it allows you to type e.g. find . -name "*.java" instead of find . -name "*.java" -print).

Hope that makes sense. The accepted answer at the other thread talks about the same thing.


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