# Remove Untracked Files From A Directory Let's say I have a directory (`spec/cassettes`) full of a ton of generated YAML files. Most of these files are tracked by git. However, I just generated a bunch of new ones that are untracked. For whatever reason, I don't want these files. I need to delete them. Running `rm` on each of them is going to be too tedious. And it is tricky to target them for a bulk delete since there are a ton of other files in that directory that I want to keep. One way to approach this is have `git ls-files` help out with listing all files in the directory that are untracked. The `--others` flag filters to untracked files. ```bash git ls-files --others --exclude-standard spec/cassettes ``` From there, I can pipe it to `rm` (with `xargs` collapsing all the files into a single line): ```bash git ls-files --others --exclude-standard spec/cassettes | xargs rm ``` See `man git-ls-files` for more details.