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Full Discussion: A find and sort challenge...
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers A find and sort challenge... Post 73656 by ppohz on Friday 3rd of June 2005 04:43:58 AM
Old 06-03-2005
Question A find and sort challenge...

Hi,

I need to generate a listing of files that have been changed since x day. the listing is to be sorted by date.

I managed to get the 1st requirement using the find command :
find . -mtime -100 -type f -ls
but I don't know how to sort the ls listing by date. Smilie

The challenge comes when the files that have been changed for a day lies all over the directory. Smilie

Can anyone help ?

A zillion thanks !
Poh

p/s: I'm on Tru64 UNIX; and sort -M is not available...

Last edited by ppohz; 06-03-2005 at 05:50 AM..
 

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SCAN(1)                                                              [nmh-1.5]                                                             SCAN(1)

NAME
scan - produce a one line per message scan listing SYNOPSIS
scan [+folder] [msgs] [-clear | -noclear] [-form formatfile] [-format string] [-header | -noheader] [-width columns] [-reverse | -nore- verse] [-file filename] [-version] [-help] DESCRIPTION
Scan produces a one-line-per-message listing of the specified folder or messages. Each scan line contains the message number (name), the date, the "From:" field, the "Subject" field, and, if room allows, some of the body of the message. For example: 15+ 10/05 crocker nned <<Last week I asked some of 16- 10/05 crocker message id format <<I recommend 18 10/06 brien Re: Exit status from mkdir 19 10/07*brien "scan" listing format in nmh The `+' on message 15 indicates that it is the current message. The `-' on message 16 indicates that it has been replied to, as indicated by a "Replied:" component (produced by the -annotate switch to the repl command). The `*' on message 19 indicates that no "Date:" header was present. The time of last modification of the message is given instead. If there is sufficient room left on the scan line after the subject, the line will be filled with text from the body, preceded by "<<", and terminated by ">>" if the body is sufficiently short. Scan actually reads each of the specified messages and parses them to extract the desired fields. During parsing, appropriate error messages will be produced if there are format errors in any of the messages. By default, scan will decode RFC-2047 (MIME) encoding in these scan listings. Scan will only decode these fields if your terminal can natively display the character set used in the encoding. You should set the MM_CHARSET environment variable to your native character set, if it is not US-ASCII. See the mh-profile(5) man page for details about this environment variable. The switch -reverse, makes scan list the messages in reverse order. The -file filename switch allows the user to obtain a scan listing of a maildrop file as produced by packf. This listing includes every message in the file (you can't scan individual messages). The switch -reverse is ignored with this option. The switch -width columns may be used to specify the width of the scan line. The default is to use the width of the terminal. The -header switch produces a header line prior to the scan listing. Currently, the name of the folder and the current date and time are output (see the HISTORY section for more information). If the -clear switch is used and scan's output is directed to a terminal, then scan will consult the environment variables $TERM and $TERM- CAP to determine your terminal type in order to find out how to clear the screen prior to exiting. If the -clear switch is used and scan's output is not directed to a terminal (e.g., a pipe or a file), then scan will send a formfeed prior to exiting. For example, the command: (scan -clear -header; show all -show pr -f) | lpr produces a scan listing of the current folder, followed by a formfeed, followed by a formatted listing of all messages in the folder, one per page. Omitting "-show pr -f" will cause the messages to be concatenated, separated by a one-line header and two blank lines. To override the output format used by scan, the -format string or -form file switches are used. This permits individual fields of the scan listing to be extracted with ease. The string is simply a format string and the file is simply a format file. See mh-format(5) for the details. In addition to the standard mh-format(5) escapes, scan also recognizes the following additional component escapes: Escape Returns Description body string the (compressed) first part of the body dtimenow date the current date folder string the name of the current folder If no date header is present in the message, the function escapes which operate on {date} will return values for the date of last modifica- tion of the message file itself. This feature is handy for scanning a draft folder, as message drafts usually aren't allowed to have dates in them. scan will update the nmh context prior to starting the listing, so interrupting a long scan listing preserves the new context. nmh purists hate this idea. FILES
$HOME/.mh_profile The user profile PROFILE COMPONENTS
Path: To determine the user's nmh directory Alternate-Mailboxes: To determine the user's mailboxes Current-Folder: To find the default current folder SEE ALSO
inc(1), pick(1), show(1), mh-format(5) DEFAULTS
`+folder' defaults to the current folder `msgs' defaults to all `-format' defaulted as described above `-noheader' `-width' defaulted to the width of the terminal CONTEXT
If a folder is given, it will become the current folder. HISTORY
Prior to using the format string mechanism, -header used to generate a heading saying what each column in the listing was. Format strings prevent this from happening. BUGS
The argument to the -format switch must be interpreted as a single token by the shell that invokes scan. Therefore, one must usually place the argument to this switch inside quotes. The value of each component escape is set by scan to the contents of the first message header scan encounters with the corresponding compo- nent name; any following headers with the same component name are ignored. MH.6.8 11 June 2012 SCAN(1)
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