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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting cp | greb Post 302667999 by alpha_mouse on Sunday 8th of July 2012 10:40:38 AM
Old 07-08-2012
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Pauls-Mac-mini:NEED TO DOWNLOAD mmtimelapse$ stat -c "%y %n" * | head
-bash: /usr/bin/stat: Argument list too long

aaaaah

---------- Post updated at 09:40 AM ---------- Previous update was at 09:36 AM ----------

stat -c "%y %n" * | awk -F"[ :]" '$2>=9&&$2<17||$2==17&&$3<=30{print $6}'

Give the same problem.
 
File::stat(3pm) 					 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					   File::stat(3pm)

NAME
File::stat - by-name interface to Perl's built-in stat() functions SYNOPSIS
use File::stat; $st = stat($file) or die "No $file: $!"; if ( ($st->mode & 0111) && $st->nlink > 1) ) { print "$file is executable with lotsa links "; } use File::stat qw(:FIELDS); stat($file) or die "No $file: $!"; if ( ($st_mode & 0111) && $st_nlink > 1) ) { print "$file is executable with lotsa links "; } DESCRIPTION
This module's default exports override the core stat() and lstat() functions, replacing them with versions that return "File::stat" objects. This object has methods that return the similarly named structure field name from the stat(2) function; namely, dev, ino, mode, nlink, uid, gid, rdev, size, atime, mtime, ctime, blksize, and blocks. You may also import all the structure fields directly into your namespace as regular variables using the :FIELDS import tag. (Note that this still overrides your stat() and lstat() functions.) Access these fields as variables named with a preceding "st_" in front their method names. Thus, "$stat_obj->dev()" corresponds to $st_dev if you import the fields. To access this functionality without the core overrides, pass the "use" an empty import list, and then access function functions with their full qualified names. On the other hand, the built-ins are still available via the "CORE::" pseudo-package. BUGS
As of Perl 5.8.0 after using this module you cannot use the implicit $_ or the special filehandle "_" with stat() or lstat(), trying to do so leads into strange errors. The workaround is for $_ to be explicit my $stat_obj = stat $_; and for "_" to explicitly populate the object using the unexported and undocumented populate() function with CORE::stat(): my $stat_obj = File::stat::populate(CORE::stat(_)); NOTE
While this class is currently implemented using the Class::Struct module to build a struct-like class, you shouldn't rely upon this. AUTHOR
Tom Christiansen perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 File::stat(3pm)
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