Commands using find (1,252)

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print text in color red
eg: $printTextInColorRed foo bar foo bar [in red color]

Output the content of your Active Directory in a CSV file

RTFM function
Simple edit to work for OSX. Now just add this to your ~/.profile and `source ~/.profile`

Print a cron formatted time for 2 minutes in the future (for crontab testing)
Another function to stick into your .bashrc This spits out the time two minutes in the future, but already formatted for pasting into your crontab file for testing without any thought required on your part. Frequently things don't work the way you expect inside a crontab job, and you probably want to find out now that your $PATH is completely different inside of cron or other global variables aren't defined. So this will generate a date you can use for testing now, and then later you can change it to run at 5:37 am on a Sunday evening.

Create subdirectory and move files into it
With this form you dont need to cut out target directory using grep/sed/etc.

Find usb device in realtime
Using this command you can track a moment when usb device was attached.

add all files not under version control to repository
With the force options the same results can be achieved

Binary Clock
Create a binary clock.

Resize A Mounted EXT3 File System
Live extension of an ext3 file system on logical volume $v by 200GB without the need to unmount/remount. Requires that you have 1) a version of resize2fs that contains code merged from ext2online, and 2) kernel support for online resizing. (e.g. RHEL 5)

loop over a set of items that contain spaces
If you want to operate on a set of items in Bash, and at least one of them contains spaces, the `for` loop isn't going to work the way you might expect. For example, if the current dir has two files, named "file" and "file 2", this would loop 3 times (once each for "file", "file", and "2"): $ for ITEM in `ls`; do echo "$ITEM"; done Instead, use a while loop with `read`: $ ls | while read ITEM; do echo "$ITEM"; done


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