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Full Discussion: Sort -t: -k1
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Sort -t: -k1 Post 303043832 by jim mcnamara on Friday 7th of February 2020 06:16:30 PM
Old 02-07-2020
To sort dates it works best to convert them to epoch seconds - the number of seconds since Jan 1 970. This code adds an epoch time sorts based on the epoch time, then prints the original minus the seconds: this assumes some kin of linux OS -
Code:
while read dt 
do   
   echo $(date -d "$dt" +%s) $dt;    
 done <  file | sort -k1n | awk '{printf("%s %s %s %s\n", $2, $3, $4, $5) }'

Called a tag sort.
I get this output:
Code:
Jan 20 16:27:38 2020
Jan 20 16:29:51 2020
Jan 20 16:44:39 2020
Jan 20 16:56:41 2020
Feb 03 15:58:27 2020
Feb 03 16:01:23 2020
Feb 03 16:11:29 2020
Feb 04 11:01:49 2020

--- Post updated at 17:16 ---

@Drl - one of our senior people, may mention getting a linux package for date operations, one of the commands is "dsort" which does exactly what the code above does. Hopefully he will mention where to download it. I do not know
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to jim mcnamara For This Post:
 

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CAL(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						    CAL(1)

NAME
cal -- displays a calendar SYNOPSIS
cal [-3hjry] [-A after] [-B before] [-d day-of-week] [-R reform-spec] [[month] year] DESCRIPTION
cal displays a simple calendar. If arguments are not specified, the current month is displayed. The options are as follows: -3 Same as ``-A 1 -B 1''. -A after Display after months after the specified month. -B before Display before months before the specified month. -d day-of-week Specifies the day of the week on which the calendar should start. Valid values are 0 through 6, presenting Sunday through Saturday, inclusively. The default output starts on Sundays. -h Highlight the current day, if present in the displayed calendar. If output is to a terminal, then the appropriate terminal sequences are used, otherwise overstriking is used. If more than one -h is used and output is to a terminal, the current date will be high- lighted in inverse video instead of bold. -j Display Julian dates (days one-based, numbered from January 1). -R reform-spec Selects an alternate Gregorian reform point from the default of September 3rd, 1752. The reform-spec can be selected by one of the built-in names (see NOTES for a list) or by a date of the form YYYY/MM/DD. The date and month may be omitted, provided that what is specified uniquely selects a given built-in reform point. If an exact date is specified, then that date is taken to be the first missing date of the Gregorian Reform to be applied. -r Display the month in which the Gregorian Reform adjustment was applied, if no other month or year information is given. If used in conjunction with -y, then the entire year is displayed. -y Display a calendar for the current year. If no parameters are specified, the current month's calendar is displayed. A single parameter specifies the year and optionally the month in ISO format: ``cal 2007-12'' Two parameters denote the month (1 - 12) and year. Note that the century must be included in the year. A year starts on Jan 1. NOTES
In the USA and Great Britain the Gregorian Reformation occurred in 1752. By this time, most countries had recognized the reformation (although a few did not recognize it until the 1900's.) Eleven days following September 2, 1752 were eliminated by the reformation, so the calendar for that month is a bit unusual. In view of the chaotic way the Gregorian calendar was adopted throughout the world in the years between 1582 and 1928 make sure to take into account the date of the Gregorian Reformation in your region if you are checking a calendar for a very old date. cal has a decent built-in list of Gregorian Reform dates and the names of the countries where the reform was adopted: Italy Oct. 5, 1582 Denmark Feb. 19, 1700 Spain Oct. 5, 1582 Great Britain Sep. 3, 1752 Portugal Oct. 5, 1582 Sweden Feb. 18, 1753 Poland Oct. 5, 1582 Finland Feb. 18, 1753 France Dec. 12, 1582 Japan Dec. 20, 1872 Luxembourg Dec. 22, 1582 China Nov. 7, 1911 Netherlands Dec. 22, 1582 Bulgaria Apr. 1, 1916 Bavaria Oct. 6, 1583 U.S.S.R. Feb. 1, 1918 Austria Jan. 7, 1584 Serbia Jan. 19, 1919 Switzerland Jan. 12, 1584 Romania Jan. 19, 1919 Hungary Oct. 22, 1587 Greece Mar. 10, 1924 Germany Feb. 19, 1700 Turkey Dec. 19, 1925 Norway Feb. 19, 1700 Egypt Sep. 18, 1928 The country known as Great Britain can also be referred to as England since that has less letters and no spaces in it. This is meant only as a measure of expediency, not as a possible slight to anyone involved. HISTORY
A cal command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BSD
December 21, 2007 BSD
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