Most people use rm -i for safety: so they're always asked for confirmation before removing a particular file. Mike Loukides told me about another way he uses rm -i. When he has several files to remove, but the wildcards (Section 1.13) would be too painful to type with a plain rm, Mike gives rm -i a bigger list of filenames and answers "n" to filenames he doesn't want deleted. For instance:
% ls aberrant abhorred abnormal abominate acerbic aberrate abhorrent abominable absurd acrimonious ... % rm -i ab* rm: remove aberrant (y/n)? y rm: remove aberrate (y/n)? n rm: remove abhorred (y/n)? y rm: remove abhorrent (y/n)? n ...
-- JP
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