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Full Discussion: Help deciphering script
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Help deciphering script Post 302158814 by bbbngowc on Wednesday 16th of January 2008 10:26:07 AM
Old 01-16-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
Hard to say without seeing file.awk. But maybe because 12-31-07.txt comes after 01-dd-yy.txt in a sort? This is why year-month-day is better. The 2 digit year is not a great idea either. It will fail if any date is in a different century. A 4 digit year will work for thousands of years and most of us try to use a 4 digit year where ever we can.

DUH! You are correct! The list is sorted, so it's grabbing the last file which is 12 and not 01. I would need to modify to read differently.
 

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CAL(1)								   User Commands							    CAL(1)

NAME
cal - display a calendar SYNOPSIS
cal [options] [[[day] month] year] DESCRIPTION
cal displays a simple calendar. If no arguments are specified, the current month is displayed. OPTIONS
-1, --one Display single month output. (This is the default.) -3, --three Display prev/current/next month output. -s, --sunday Display Sunday as the first day of the week. -m, --monday Display Monday as the first day of the week. -j, --julian Display Julian dates (days one-based, numbered from January 1). -y, --year Display a calendar for the current year. -V, --version Display version information and exit. -h, --help Display help screen and exit. PARAMETERS
A single parameter specifies the year (1 - 9999) to be displayed; note the year must be fully specified: cal 89 will not display a calendar for 1989. Two parameters denote the month (1 - 12) and year. Three parameters denote the day (1-31), month and year, and the day will be highlighted if the calendar is displayed on a terminal. If no parameters are specified, the current month's calendar is displayed. A year starts on Jan 1. The first day of the week is determined by the locale. The Gregorian Reformation is assumed to have occurred in 1752 on the 3rd of September. By this time, most countries had recognized the ref- ormation (although a few did not recognize it until the early 1900's). Ten days following that date were eliminated by the reformation, so the calendar for that month is a bit unusual. HISTORY
A cal command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. AVAILABILITY
The cal command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. util-linux June 2011 CAL(1)
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