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Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions How do I get at the modification date for a file as a variable for a script? Post 302379898 by Scrutinizer on Sunday 13th of December 2009 04:46:21 AM
Old 12-13-2009
Or e.g.:
Code:
var=$(ls -l "$filename" |awk '{print $6}')

Group write permissions:
Code:
var=$(ls -l "$filename" |cut -c5-7)

If you need mutiple values
Code:
ls -l | 
while read permissions number_of_hard_links owner group size date time filename
do
   echo $date
   echo $permissions
done

Be advised that time output is not uniform and sometimes takes one column and sometimes two columns. Some 'ls'es have command line options to get around that

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 12-13-2009 at 06:16 AM..
 

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STG-EDIT(1)							   StGit Manual 						       STG-EDIT(1)

NAME
stg-edit - edit a patch description or diff SYNOPSIS
stg edit [options] [<patch>] DESCRIPTION
Edit the description and author information of the given patch (or the current patch if no patch name was given). With --diff, also edit the diff. The editor is invoked with the following contents: From: A U Thor <author@example.com> Date: creation date Patch description If --diff was specified, the diff appears at the bottom, after a separator: --- Diff text Command-line options can be used to modify specific information without invoking the editor. (With the --edit option, the editor is invoked even if such command-line options are given.) If the patch diff is edited but does not apply, no changes are made to the patch at all. The edited patch is saved to a file which you can feed to "stg edit --file", once you have made sure it does apply. OPTIONS
-d, --diff Edit the patch diff. -e, --edit Invoke interactive editor. --sign Add a "Signed-off-by:" to the end of the patch. --ack Add an "Acked-by:" line to the end of the patch. -m MESSAGE, --message MESSAGE Use MESSAGE instead of invoking the editor. -f FILE, --file FILE Use the contents of FILE instead of invoking the editor. (If FILE is "-", write to stdout.) --save-template FILE Instead of running the command, just write the message template to FILE, and exit. (If FILE is "-", write to stdout.) When driving StGit from another program, it is often useful to first call a command with --save-template, then let the user edit the message, and then call the same command with --file. --author "NAME <EMAIL>" Set the author details. --authname NAME Set the author name. --authemail EMAIL Set the author email. --authdate DATE Set the author date. -O OPTIONS, --diff-opts OPTIONS Extra options to pass to "git diff". STGIT
Part of the StGit suite - see linkman:stg[1] StGit 03/13/2012 STG-EDIT(1)
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