Glob Patterns
From Wikipedia:
In computer programming, glob (/ɡlɑːb/) patterns specify sets of filenames with wildcard characters. For example, the Unix Bash shell command
mv *.txt textfiles/moves (mv) all files with names ending in.txtfrom the current directory to the directorytextfiles. Here,*is a wildcard standing for "any string of characters except /" and*.txtis a glob pattern. The other common wildcard is the question mark (?), which stands for one character. For example,mv ?.txt shorttextfiles/will move all files named with a single character followed by.txtfrom the current directory to directoryshorttextfiles, while??.txtwould match all files whose name consists of 2 characters followed by.txt.In addition to matching filenames, globs are also used widely for matching arbitrary strings (wildcard matching). In this capacity a common interface is
fnmatch.
In addition to matching filenames, globs are also used widely for matching arbitrary strings (wildcard matching). In this capacity a common interface is fnmatch.
Software Implementing or Deploying Glob Patterns
References
Web References
- Glob (programming) (from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
- fast-glob a fast and efficient glob library for Nodejs (from Github by mrmlnc)