I'm using linux mint 13 xfce and I have a file named wv.gold that I'm trying to check in bash if it's open by any program (for instance, I opened it in sublime-text and gedit)
In many forums people say that if I run lsof | grep filename I should get 0 if it's open or 256(1) if it's closed, but in fact I get nothing (empty string) if I run using grep "wv.gold", and get a little list if I do it using grep gold.
The list is something like:
bash       2045  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
bash       2082  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
watch      4463  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
gedit     16679  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
lsof      20823  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
grep      20824  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
lsof      20825  user   cwd   DIR   8,1     4096     658031 /home/user/path/to/dir
Thus, I get the path to the directory it is but NOT the path to the file (there are other files there) and either way only to gedit process, not to sublime-text process.
Is there some easy way to see if a txt file is opened by any other program?
EDIT: It turns out (cf. comments from @mata and @ctn) that some editors load files and close them immediately, and they just reopen the file when saving it. This way, we can only see it when they are still opening a big file (since you have the time to observe it while opening) and it disappears immediately after that.
 
     
    