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Micro Focus Exam 050-733 Topic 2 Question 98 Discussion

Actual exam question for Micro Focus's 050-733 exam
Question #: 98
Topic #: 2
[All 050-733 Questions]

You do not want to see any error messages when using the find command; you want to see only the results.

Which command accomplishes this task?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: D

Contribute your Thoughts:

Emmanuel
1 months ago
Option C, no doubt. The only thing better than finding configuration files is finding them without any annoying error messages. It's like a silent movie, but with files instead of actors.
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Deandrea
2 days ago
Definitely, option C is the best choice. No distractions, just the files you're looking for.
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Jess
3 days ago
I agree, option C is the way to go. No errors, just results.
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Charlena
1 months ago
Hmm, C seems like the obvious choice here. I mean, why would you want to see errors when you're just trying to get the job done? Not very efficient, if you ask me.
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Carin
1 months ago
I'm going with C. Who needs error messages anyway? They're just distracting from the important stuff, like finding those configuration files.
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Phung
1 months ago
Ah, the old 'find' command trick! I've got to hand it to the person who came up with option C, they really know their stuff.
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Elvis
11 days ago
User 3: I always use option C when I want a clean output from the find command.
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Willodean
13 days ago
User 2: That's right, no error messages cluttering up the results!
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Clemencia
14 days ago
User 1: Option C is the way to go, it redirects error messages to /dev/null.
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Malcom
2 months ago
Option C is the way to go! Redirecting stderr to /dev/null is the key to silencing those pesky error messages.
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Peggie
17 days ago
Redirecting stderr to /dev/null makes sense.
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Ivory
1 months ago
Good to know, I always get annoyed by error messages.
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Christiane
2 months ago
Thanks for the tip! I'll remember that for next time.
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Nana
2 months ago
Option C is the correct one.
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Ressie
2 months ago
I'm not sure, but I think D) find /etc -name \'*conf\' 1>/dev/null could also work. It redirects standard output to /dev/null, which should hide any error messages.
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Lavonna
2 months ago
I agree with Stanton. Option C makes sense to me too. We don't want to see any error messages, just the results.
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Stanton
2 months ago
I think the answer is C) find /etc -name \'*conf\' 2>/dev/null because it redirects only the error messages to /dev/null.
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