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rated 0 times [  18] [ 0]  / answers: 1 / hits: 41318  / 3 Years ago, tue, august 24, 2021, 12:18:46

Say I need to find out how many words are in each file that has the word 'work' in its name.


I know that to find files with 'work' in the name, it would be ls work. And to figure out the number of words in a file it would be wc -w.


However I tried the following and it seems to be just displaying the number of files, not the number of words combined in all files (which I need):


ls work | wc -w

So say if there are 14 files that have 'work' in the name, it would display 14, not the number of words.


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 Answers
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The syntax is wc -w [FILE]. If you don't use FILE but pipe in the output of ls work it will only count what it will read on stdin.



You need to pipe in the text itself:



cat *work* | wc -w


Alternative you could execute wc with find -exec. But be aware that this could show multiple "total" sums as find will call wc multiple times if there are lots of files.



find ./ -type f -name "*work*" -exec wc -w {} +

[#29231] Thursday, August 26, 2021, 3 Years  [reply] [flag answer]
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