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# The `basename` command
The `basename` is a command-line utility that strips directory from given file names. Optionally, it can also remove any trailing suffix. It is a simple command that accepts only a few options.
### Examples
The most basic example is to print the file name with the leading directories removed:
```bash
basename /etc/bar/foo.txt
```
The output will include the file name:
```bash
foo.txt
```
If you run basename on a path string that points to a directory, you will get the last segment of the path. In this example, /etc/bar is a directory.
```bash
basename /etc/bar
```
Output
```bash
bar
```
The basename command removes any trailing `/` characters:
```bash
basename /etc/bar/foo.txt/
```
Output
```bash
foo.txt
```
### Options
1. By default, each output line ends in a newline character. To end the lines with NUL, use the -z (--zero) option.
```bash
$ basename -z /etc/bar/foo.txt
foo.txt$
```
2. The `basename` command can accept multiple names as arguments. To do so, invoke the command with the `-a` (`--multiple`) option, followed by the list of files separated by space. For example, to get the file names of `/etc/bar/foo.txt` and `/etc/spam/eggs.docx` you would run:
```bash
basename -a /etc/bar/foo.txt /etc/spam/eggs.docx
```
```bash
foo.txt
eggs.docx
```
### Syntax
The basename command supports two syntax formats:
```bash
basename NAME [SUFFIX]
basename OPTION... NAME...
```
### Additional functionalities
**Removing a Trailing Suffix**: To remove any trailing suffix from the file name, pass the suffix as a second argument:
```bash
basename /etc/hostname name
host
```
Generally, this feature is used to strip file extensions
### Help Command
Run the following command to view the complete guide to `basename` command.
```bash
man basename
```