Original:
Jan 23 2011 10:42 SOMETHING 2007.12.20.avi
Jun 26 2009 SOMETHING 2009.06.25.avi
Feb 12 2010 SOMETHING 2010.02.11.avi
Jan 29 2011 09:17 SOMETHING 2011.01.27.avi
Feb 11 2011 20:06 SOMETHING 2011.02.10.avi
Feb 27 2011 23:05 SOMETHING 2011.02.24.avi
Output:
Feb 27 2011 23:05 SOMETHING
On Mon, Feb 28, 2011 at 3:35 PM, erikmccaskey64 erikmccaske...@zoho.com wrote:
How could I get the output where the newest file is at the top?
man ls,
-t sort by modification time
HTH,
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
On Mon, Feb 28, 2011 at 3:35 PM, erikmccaskey64 erikmccaske...@zoho.com wrote:
Original:
Jan 23 2011 10:42 SOMETHING 2007.12.20.avi
[snip]
Feb 12 2010 SOMETHING 2010.02.11.avi
Jun 26 2009 SOMETHING 2009.06.25.avi
How could I get the output where the newest file is at the top?
If this is a
At Mon, 28 Feb 2011 12:35:24 -0800 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
Original:
Jan 23 2011 10:42 SOMETHING 2007.12.20.avi
Jun 26 2009 SOMETHING 2009.06.25.avi
Feb 12 2010 SOMETHING 2010.02.11.avi
Jan 29 2011 09:17 SOMETHING 2011.01.27.avi
Feb 11 2011 20:06 SOMETHING
On Mon, Feb 28, 2011 at 12:35 PM, erikmccaskey64
erikmccaske...@zoho.com wrote:
Original:
Jan 23 2011 10:42 SOMETHING 2007.12.20.avi
Jun 26 2009 SOMETHING 2009.06.25.avi
Feb 12 2010 SOMETHING 2010.02.11.avi
Jan 29 2011 09:17 SOMETHING 2011.01.27.avi
Feb 11 2011 20:06 SOMETHING
on 13:23 Mon 28 Feb, Mark (mhullr...@gmail.com) wrote:
On Mon, Feb 28, 2011 at 12:35 PM, erikmccaskey64
erikmccaske...@zoho.com wrote:
Original:
Jan 23 2011 10:42 SOMETHING 2007.12.20.avi
Jun 26 2009 SOMETHING 2009.06.25.avi
Feb 12 2010 SOMETHING 2010.02.11.avi
Jan 29 2011 09:17
On 2/28/11 12:35 PM, erikmccaskey64 wrote:
Original:
Jan 23 2011 10:42 SOMETHING 2007.12.20.avi
Jun 26 2009 SOMETHING 2009.06.25.avi
Feb 12 2010 SOMETHING 2010.02.11.avi
Jan 29 2011 09:17 SOMETHING 2011.01.27.avi
Feb 11 2011 20:06 SOMETHING 2011.02.10.avi
Feb 27 2011 23:05 SOMETHING
7 matches
Mail list logo