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Re: Files modified after a given date
- X-seq: zsh-users 2492
- From: Bruce Stephens <bruce@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: zsh-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: Files modified after a given date
- Date: 22 Aug 1999 19:55:27 +0100
- In-reply-to: Vincent Lefevre's message of "Sun, 22 Aug 1999 19:17:25 +0200"
- Mailing-list: contact zsh-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx; run by ezmlm
- References: <19990822183113.A21680@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <m3pv0fepdu.fsf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <19990822191725.A22106@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Vincent Lefevre <vincent@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> On Sun, Aug 22, 1999 at 17:44:45 +0100, Bruce Stephens wrote:
> > Assuming I'm understanding the question correctly, no. You can (in
> > 3.1.6, anyway), get files modified since some time relative to the
> > current time:
> >
> > *.c(ms-30)
> >
> > expands to C files modified in the last 30 seconds, for example.
>
> But I don't want it to be relative to the current time.
In which case, I don't think there's a builtin glob way of doing it.
You could write a function using the stat module, but I don't think we
have user-defined glob patterns yet?
zmodload stat; builtin stat -H foo .zshrc; echo $foo[mtime]
prints 934038501, for me.
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