Hi, if spaces are involved, then quotation marks hould be put around the argument of "echo".
Using the leading blank from David Wright's post: $ fname=" long file with spaces.mp4" $ x=`echo $fname | rev | cut -d. -f2 | rev` $ test "$x".mp4 = "$fname" && echo IS EQUAL $ I.e. "$x".mp4 and "$fname" are not equal. That's because the leading blank got lost in the "echo" run: $ echo "'$x'" 'long file with spaces' Now with quotation marks around $fname to preserve the leading blank: $ x=`echo "$fname" | rev | cut -d. -f2 | rev` $ test "$x".mp4 = "$fname" && echo IS EQUAL IS EQUAL A similar effect would happen with double blanks inside the name: $ fname="long file with double spaces.mp4" $ x=`echo $fname | rev | cut -d. -f2 | rev` $ echo "'$x'" 'long file with double spaces' $ x=`echo "$fname" | rev | cut -d. -f2 | rev` $ echo "'$x'" 'long file with double spaces' Have a nice day :) Thomas