On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 8:01 PM, paul g <pj.world at hotmail.com> wrote:

> Now what does the [.] mean in the lines you gave? Users Name? right?


Nope. In unix/linux systems, the dot character ( . ) refers to the current
directory the command is being executed from.

So in the example command given (find . -type f -exec chmod 444 {} \;), the
dot character is telling find to start operations in the current directory.
You could have just as well put a full path in there if you wanted.

find /path/to/files -type f -exec chmod 444 {} \;

In a similar vein, the double-dot character, ( .. ) always refers to the
parent directory.

-Erik
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