On Friday 19 January 2007 7:54 pm, Greg Wallace wrote:
> Could someone tell me what the date that comes out of this command is?  In
> looking at the man pages, it goes to a lot of trouble explaining all of the
> different options you can specify but nowhere does it simply say "With no
> options, shows the following ...".  I also tried info.  My guess would be
> that it is the last time the file was modified, but I want to be sure.

Well, dir isn't a command at all. It's technically an alias.  Do this:

alias | grep dir

you'll see that it's an alias for "ls -l".  The time you'll see there is the 
"modification time". It's the same when you do:

ls -l myFile.txt

If you don't specify any other argument it will show the last MODIFICATION 
time (when contents of file changed).

If you do this:

ls -lc myFile.txt

it ill show the last "CHANGE" time. (this time is updated whenever the 
metadata of a file is changed...like ownership, permissions etc)

And finally:

ls -lu myFile.txt

It show the last time the file was ACCESED.

HTH,
Jorge
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