Hi,
Is anybody can help me to get the file creation date with seconds?
-rw-r--r-- 1 opsc system 422550845 Aug 22 15:41 StatData.20020821
Thanks in advance
Krishna (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I have some files which are creates every day using a script. I want to create a log files which does write "filename,creation day and time"
how can I do this ??
Alice (3 Replies)
Dear Expert,
Is there a command to do that in Unix?
In such a way that we don't need to actually "write" or
modified the content.
-- monkfan (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I need to get file creation date.
I have to access one file who's name is like...
abc.log092308
and the date changes as per current date. And i am accessing this file next day. meance in above case i will access above file on 09-24-2008
Also one problem is that this file... (2 Replies)
I want to gzip a file and append the creation date to the end of the file. How can I accomplish this task. Basically they are log files which need a creation date stamp appended to make sure they do not overwrite other log files.
-jack (3 Replies)
Hi,
I just need to know way of getting date of file when it was created.
eg i have a file abc created on 23 aug. Now i need to know date of file i.e. 23 aug. How can i get that data.
Thanks
Sarbjit (7 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone tell me a process to find the creation date of a file in a directory.
If suppose I have a file in a directory created in 2009
-rw-r--r-- 1 xyz guest 2480 Jul 16 2009 sample.txt
The command should return the the file creation date as 16/07/2009
thanks, (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am quite new to Perl scripting and i need to create a .TXT file using perl, with fields (A,B,C,D,E), and this text file should be named with current file creation date "XYZ_CCYYMMDD.TXT" (i.e.XYZ_2011042514:33 PM).
Can anyone who has done this, please share their expertise on this... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have 80 large files, from which I want to get a specific value to run a Bash script. Firstly, I want to get the part of a file which contains this:
Name =A
xxxxxx
yyyyyy
zzzzzz
aaaaaa
bbbbbb
Value = 57
This is necessary because in a file there are written more lines which... (6 Replies)
Hello ,
I am looking for a script to print file name and its last updated time.
FILE CREATION-TIME FILE-NAME
24/10/2017 12:34 TDR-IU-8-2017.10.24.07:40:00-2017.10.24.07:45:00
when we run l command it print the directory and the files with details like permission,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sadique.manzar
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
dump
dump(n) dump(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
dump - Dump information about Tcl interpreter in TkCon
SYNOPSIS
dump method ?-nocomplain? ?-filter pattern? ?--? pattern ?pattern ...?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
The dump command provides a way for the user to spit out state information about the interpreter in a Tcl readable (and human readable)
form. It takes the general form:
dump method ?-nocomplain? ?-filter pattern? ?--? pattern ?pattern ...?
The patterns represent glob-style patterns (as in string match pattern $str). -nocomplain will prevent dump from throwing an error if no
items matched the pattern. -filter is interpreted as appropriate for the method. The various methods are:
dump command args
Outputs one or more commands.
dump procedure args
Outputs one or more procs in sourceable form.
dump variable args
Outputs the values of variables in sourceable form. Recognizes nested arrays. The -filter pattern is used as to filter array ele-
ment names and is interepreted as a glob pattern (defaults to {*}). It is passed down for nested arrays.
dump widget args
Outputs one or more widgets by giving their configuration options. The -filter pattern is used as to filter the config options and
is interpreted as a case insensitive regexp pattern (defaults to {.*}).
SEE ALSO
idebug(n), observe(n), tkcon(1), tkcon(n), tkconrc(5)KEYWORDS
Tk, console, dump
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) Jeffrey Hobbs <jeff at hobbs.org>
TkCon 2.5 dump(n)