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How can I list files in reverse time order by a command and pass them as arguments to another command?
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I have a program which takes in some files as arguments in one command line. I would like to invoke it with all the files in a directory listed in reverse time order.
For example:
I have following files in reverse time order in a directory
$ ls -tr
Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
I can run my program straightforward,
myprogram Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
but I want to do the file listing by another command. This won't work because of the space in one file's name:
myprogram $(ls -tr)
I remember parsing ls
output is not a good practice. I am not sure if find
can help.
What can I do then?
Thanks.
bash
add a comment |
I have a program which takes in some files as arguments in one command line. I would like to invoke it with all the files in a directory listed in reverse time order.
For example:
I have following files in reverse time order in a directory
$ ls -tr
Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
I can run my program straightforward,
myprogram Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
but I want to do the file listing by another command. This won't work because of the space in one file's name:
myprogram $(ls -tr)
I remember parsing ls
output is not a good practice. I am not sure if find
can help.
What can I do then?
Thanks.
bash
add a comment |
I have a program which takes in some files as arguments in one command line. I would like to invoke it with all the files in a directory listed in reverse time order.
For example:
I have following files in reverse time order in a directory
$ ls -tr
Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
I can run my program straightforward,
myprogram Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
but I want to do the file listing by another command. This won't work because of the space in one file's name:
myprogram $(ls -tr)
I remember parsing ls
output is not a good practice. I am not sure if find
can help.
What can I do then?
Thanks.
bash
I have a program which takes in some files as arguments in one command line. I would like to invoke it with all the files in a directory listed in reverse time order.
For example:
I have following files in reverse time order in a directory
$ ls -tr
Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
I can run my program straightforward,
myprogram Introduction.pdf 'Object-Oriented Data Model.pdf'
but I want to do the file listing by another command. This won't work because of the space in one file's name:
myprogram $(ls -tr)
I remember parsing ls
output is not a good practice. I am not sure if find
can help.
What can I do then?
Thanks.
bash
bash
edited 5 hours ago
Tim
asked 6 hours ago
TimTim
28.9k79270495
28.9k79270495
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
If you've got reasonably up-to-date versions of the GNU utilities you can have them handle NULL-terminated data. This allows one to construct pipelines that are not affected by whitespace or newlines in the data itself.
My test tool is a quick script called /tmp/args
:
#!/bin/bash
echo "This is args with $# value(s)"
for f in "$@"; do echo "> $f <"; done
This is how you can feed it a series of filenames on the command line, sorted by file time last modified:
find -type f -printf "%T@ %p" | sort -z | sed -z 's/^[0-9.]* //' | xargs -0 /tmp/args
The find
command prefixes each file/path name with a representation in fractional seconds of the date/time last modified. This is handled by sort
to order from lowest (oldest) to highest (newest). The sed
strips off the leading number we've just used to sort by, and the resulting set of filenames are passed to xargs
. Replace the %p
with %P
if you prefer to omit the leading ./
from filenames.
Example data
# "c d" contains a space; "e f" contains a newline; "h" has leading whitespace
touch a 'e
f' g ' h ' 'c d' b
Example result
This is args with 6 value(s)
> ./a <
> ./e
f <
> ./g <
> ./ h <
> ./c d <
> ./b <
add a comment |
(IFS=$'n'; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Assuming that the filenames don't contain newlines.
Example:
% touch 'a b'
% touch 'c d'
% touch '*'
% (IFS=$'n'; set -f; printf '%sn' $(ls -tr))
e f
a b
c d
*
Variant for a standard shell which doesn't support $'...'
strings:
(IFS='
' ; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Simple python wrapper which will work even with filenames containing newlines. Usage can be this_wrapper your_program *
.
#! /usr/bin/python
import os
import sys
sys.argv[2:] = sorted(sys.argv[2:], key=os.path.getmtime)
os.execvp(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[1:])
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something likeperl
orpython
.
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
1
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
1
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Bash doesn't yet make it easy to sort files by modification time, so here's the obligatory zsh-based answer. You don't have to switch to zsh as your login shell in order to use its features.
Here I set up a wrapper function that expects either one or two arguments; the first argument is the program to execute (e.g. myprogram
); the second, optional, argument is the directory containing the files that you want to pass to the program. If you don't specify a second argument, it defaults to the current directory.
zeio()
Name it whatever you like, of course. After a quick sanity-check of the second argument (again, defaulting to .
, the current directory), we call zsh with a single double-quoted string that contains the program (argument #1) and the directory (argument #2) -- defaulting to .
-- with a wildcard / glob expansion that has two "glob qualifiers" in the trailing parenthesis:
.
-- must be regular files (not directories or symlinks, etc)Om
--O
rder (sort) the resulting list by modification time, earliest first
It's that Om
glob qualifier that does all of the real work here.
Here's some sample runs; myprog
is a simple shell script to demonstrate the arguments it receives, in order:
#!/bin/sh
for arg do
printf 'Arg: ->%s<-n' "$arg"
done
and go.sh
is the file where I saved the function. The rest of the directory structure is:
$ tree .
.
├── dir1
│ ├── 203142
│ ├── 203143
│ └── 203144
├── dir3
│ ├── first12filename
│ ├── this is 3rd
│ └── this is second
├── dir two
│ ├── 203225
│ ├── 203226
│ └── 203227
├── go.sh
└── myprog
... where I've created the sets of three files in each subdirectory in the listed sequence; I expect to see them in this same order when I execute the function. The first filename under dir3 has a newline in it, represented by tree
with 12
. The results are:
Demonstrating the default-to-current-directory behavior:
$ zeio ./myprog
Arg: ->./myprog<-
Arg: ->./go.sh<-
Normal filename demonstration
$ zeio ./myprog dir1
Arg: ->dir1/203142<-
Arg: ->dir1/203143<-
Arg: ->dir1/203144<-
Directory has a space in it
$ zeio ./myprog "dir two"
Arg: ->dir two/203225<-
Arg: ->dir two/203226<-
Arg: ->dir two/203227<-
filenames have whitespace in them
$ zeio ./myprog dir3
Arg: ->dir3/first
filename<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is second<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is 3rd<-
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
If you've got reasonably up-to-date versions of the GNU utilities you can have them handle NULL-terminated data. This allows one to construct pipelines that are not affected by whitespace or newlines in the data itself.
My test tool is a quick script called /tmp/args
:
#!/bin/bash
echo "This is args with $# value(s)"
for f in "$@"; do echo "> $f <"; done
This is how you can feed it a series of filenames on the command line, sorted by file time last modified:
find -type f -printf "%T@ %p" | sort -z | sed -z 's/^[0-9.]* //' | xargs -0 /tmp/args
The find
command prefixes each file/path name with a representation in fractional seconds of the date/time last modified. This is handled by sort
to order from lowest (oldest) to highest (newest). The sed
strips off the leading number we've just used to sort by, and the resulting set of filenames are passed to xargs
. Replace the %p
with %P
if you prefer to omit the leading ./
from filenames.
Example data
# "c d" contains a space; "e f" contains a newline; "h" has leading whitespace
touch a 'e
f' g ' h ' 'c d' b
Example result
This is args with 6 value(s)
> ./a <
> ./e
f <
> ./g <
> ./ h <
> ./c d <
> ./b <
add a comment |
If you've got reasonably up-to-date versions of the GNU utilities you can have them handle NULL-terminated data. This allows one to construct pipelines that are not affected by whitespace or newlines in the data itself.
My test tool is a quick script called /tmp/args
:
#!/bin/bash
echo "This is args with $# value(s)"
for f in "$@"; do echo "> $f <"; done
This is how you can feed it a series of filenames on the command line, sorted by file time last modified:
find -type f -printf "%T@ %p" | sort -z | sed -z 's/^[0-9.]* //' | xargs -0 /tmp/args
The find
command prefixes each file/path name with a representation in fractional seconds of the date/time last modified. This is handled by sort
to order from lowest (oldest) to highest (newest). The sed
strips off the leading number we've just used to sort by, and the resulting set of filenames are passed to xargs
. Replace the %p
with %P
if you prefer to omit the leading ./
from filenames.
Example data
# "c d" contains a space; "e f" contains a newline; "h" has leading whitespace
touch a 'e
f' g ' h ' 'c d' b
Example result
This is args with 6 value(s)
> ./a <
> ./e
f <
> ./g <
> ./ h <
> ./c d <
> ./b <
add a comment |
If you've got reasonably up-to-date versions of the GNU utilities you can have them handle NULL-terminated data. This allows one to construct pipelines that are not affected by whitespace or newlines in the data itself.
My test tool is a quick script called /tmp/args
:
#!/bin/bash
echo "This is args with $# value(s)"
for f in "$@"; do echo "> $f <"; done
This is how you can feed it a series of filenames on the command line, sorted by file time last modified:
find -type f -printf "%T@ %p" | sort -z | sed -z 's/^[0-9.]* //' | xargs -0 /tmp/args
The find
command prefixes each file/path name with a representation in fractional seconds of the date/time last modified. This is handled by sort
to order from lowest (oldest) to highest (newest). The sed
strips off the leading number we've just used to sort by, and the resulting set of filenames are passed to xargs
. Replace the %p
with %P
if you prefer to omit the leading ./
from filenames.
Example data
# "c d" contains a space; "e f" contains a newline; "h" has leading whitespace
touch a 'e
f' g ' h ' 'c d' b
Example result
This is args with 6 value(s)
> ./a <
> ./e
f <
> ./g <
> ./ h <
> ./c d <
> ./b <
If you've got reasonably up-to-date versions of the GNU utilities you can have them handle NULL-terminated data. This allows one to construct pipelines that are not affected by whitespace or newlines in the data itself.
My test tool is a quick script called /tmp/args
:
#!/bin/bash
echo "This is args with $# value(s)"
for f in "$@"; do echo "> $f <"; done
This is how you can feed it a series of filenames on the command line, sorted by file time last modified:
find -type f -printf "%T@ %p" | sort -z | sed -z 's/^[0-9.]* //' | xargs -0 /tmp/args
The find
command prefixes each file/path name with a representation in fractional seconds of the date/time last modified. This is handled by sort
to order from lowest (oldest) to highest (newest). The sed
strips off the leading number we've just used to sort by, and the resulting set of filenames are passed to xargs
. Replace the %p
with %P
if you prefer to omit the leading ./
from filenames.
Example data
# "c d" contains a space; "e f" contains a newline; "h" has leading whitespace
touch a 'e
f' g ' h ' 'c d' b
Example result
This is args with 6 value(s)
> ./a <
> ./e
f <
> ./g <
> ./ h <
> ./c d <
> ./b <
answered 5 hours ago
roaimaroaima
46.4k758124
46.4k758124
add a comment |
add a comment |
(IFS=$'n'; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Assuming that the filenames don't contain newlines.
Example:
% touch 'a b'
% touch 'c d'
% touch '*'
% (IFS=$'n'; set -f; printf '%sn' $(ls -tr))
e f
a b
c d
*
Variant for a standard shell which doesn't support $'...'
strings:
(IFS='
' ; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Simple python wrapper which will work even with filenames containing newlines. Usage can be this_wrapper your_program *
.
#! /usr/bin/python
import os
import sys
sys.argv[2:] = sorted(sys.argv[2:], key=os.path.getmtime)
os.execvp(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[1:])
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something likeperl
orpython
.
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
1
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
1
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
(IFS=$'n'; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Assuming that the filenames don't contain newlines.
Example:
% touch 'a b'
% touch 'c d'
% touch '*'
% (IFS=$'n'; set -f; printf '%sn' $(ls -tr))
e f
a b
c d
*
Variant for a standard shell which doesn't support $'...'
strings:
(IFS='
' ; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Simple python wrapper which will work even with filenames containing newlines. Usage can be this_wrapper your_program *
.
#! /usr/bin/python
import os
import sys
sys.argv[2:] = sorted(sys.argv[2:], key=os.path.getmtime)
os.execvp(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[1:])
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something likeperl
orpython
.
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
1
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
1
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
(IFS=$'n'; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Assuming that the filenames don't contain newlines.
Example:
% touch 'a b'
% touch 'c d'
% touch '*'
% (IFS=$'n'; set -f; printf '%sn' $(ls -tr))
e f
a b
c d
*
Variant for a standard shell which doesn't support $'...'
strings:
(IFS='
' ; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Simple python wrapper which will work even with filenames containing newlines. Usage can be this_wrapper your_program *
.
#! /usr/bin/python
import os
import sys
sys.argv[2:] = sorted(sys.argv[2:], key=os.path.getmtime)
os.execvp(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[1:])
(IFS=$'n'; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Assuming that the filenames don't contain newlines.
Example:
% touch 'a b'
% touch 'c d'
% touch '*'
% (IFS=$'n'; set -f; printf '%sn' $(ls -tr))
e f
a b
c d
*
Variant for a standard shell which doesn't support $'...'
strings:
(IFS='
' ; set -f; your_program $(ls -tr))
Simple python wrapper which will work even with filenames containing newlines. Usage can be this_wrapper your_program *
.
#! /usr/bin/python
import os
import sys
sys.argv[2:] = sorted(sys.argv[2:], key=os.path.getmtime)
os.execvp(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[1:])
edited 3 hours ago
answered 5 hours ago
Uncle BillyUncle Billy
9648
9648
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something likeperl
orpython
.
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
1
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
1
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something likeperl
orpython
.
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
1
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
1
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Thanks. What if the filenames contains newlines
– Tim
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something like
perl
or python
.– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Then this won't work ;-) -- and you'll have to use something like
perl
or python
.– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
Thanks. How will you use Python?
– Tim
5 hours ago
1
1
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
I'm no python programmer, but since nobody steps in .... YMMV, that may not be the state of the art ;-)
– Uncle Billy
5 hours ago
1
1
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
@Freddy Rarely. But everything is possible.
– Tim
4 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
Bash doesn't yet make it easy to sort files by modification time, so here's the obligatory zsh-based answer. You don't have to switch to zsh as your login shell in order to use its features.
Here I set up a wrapper function that expects either one or two arguments; the first argument is the program to execute (e.g. myprogram
); the second, optional, argument is the directory containing the files that you want to pass to the program. If you don't specify a second argument, it defaults to the current directory.
zeio()
Name it whatever you like, of course. After a quick sanity-check of the second argument (again, defaulting to .
, the current directory), we call zsh with a single double-quoted string that contains the program (argument #1) and the directory (argument #2) -- defaulting to .
-- with a wildcard / glob expansion that has two "glob qualifiers" in the trailing parenthesis:
.
-- must be regular files (not directories or symlinks, etc)Om
--O
rder (sort) the resulting list by modification time, earliest first
It's that Om
glob qualifier that does all of the real work here.
Here's some sample runs; myprog
is a simple shell script to demonstrate the arguments it receives, in order:
#!/bin/sh
for arg do
printf 'Arg: ->%s<-n' "$arg"
done
and go.sh
is the file where I saved the function. The rest of the directory structure is:
$ tree .
.
├── dir1
│ ├── 203142
│ ├── 203143
│ └── 203144
├── dir3
│ ├── first12filename
│ ├── this is 3rd
│ └── this is second
├── dir two
│ ├── 203225
│ ├── 203226
│ └── 203227
├── go.sh
└── myprog
... where I've created the sets of three files in each subdirectory in the listed sequence; I expect to see them in this same order when I execute the function. The first filename under dir3 has a newline in it, represented by tree
with 12
. The results are:
Demonstrating the default-to-current-directory behavior:
$ zeio ./myprog
Arg: ->./myprog<-
Arg: ->./go.sh<-
Normal filename demonstration
$ zeio ./myprog dir1
Arg: ->dir1/203142<-
Arg: ->dir1/203143<-
Arg: ->dir1/203144<-
Directory has a space in it
$ zeio ./myprog "dir two"
Arg: ->dir two/203225<-
Arg: ->dir two/203226<-
Arg: ->dir two/203227<-
filenames have whitespace in them
$ zeio ./myprog dir3
Arg: ->dir3/first
filename<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is second<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is 3rd<-
add a comment |
Bash doesn't yet make it easy to sort files by modification time, so here's the obligatory zsh-based answer. You don't have to switch to zsh as your login shell in order to use its features.
Here I set up a wrapper function that expects either one or two arguments; the first argument is the program to execute (e.g. myprogram
); the second, optional, argument is the directory containing the files that you want to pass to the program. If you don't specify a second argument, it defaults to the current directory.
zeio()
Name it whatever you like, of course. After a quick sanity-check of the second argument (again, defaulting to .
, the current directory), we call zsh with a single double-quoted string that contains the program (argument #1) and the directory (argument #2) -- defaulting to .
-- with a wildcard / glob expansion that has two "glob qualifiers" in the trailing parenthesis:
.
-- must be regular files (not directories or symlinks, etc)Om
--O
rder (sort) the resulting list by modification time, earliest first
It's that Om
glob qualifier that does all of the real work here.
Here's some sample runs; myprog
is a simple shell script to demonstrate the arguments it receives, in order:
#!/bin/sh
for arg do
printf 'Arg: ->%s<-n' "$arg"
done
and go.sh
is the file where I saved the function. The rest of the directory structure is:
$ tree .
.
├── dir1
│ ├── 203142
│ ├── 203143
│ └── 203144
├── dir3
│ ├── first12filename
│ ├── this is 3rd
│ └── this is second
├── dir two
│ ├── 203225
│ ├── 203226
│ └── 203227
├── go.sh
└── myprog
... where I've created the sets of three files in each subdirectory in the listed sequence; I expect to see them in this same order when I execute the function. The first filename under dir3 has a newline in it, represented by tree
with 12
. The results are:
Demonstrating the default-to-current-directory behavior:
$ zeio ./myprog
Arg: ->./myprog<-
Arg: ->./go.sh<-
Normal filename demonstration
$ zeio ./myprog dir1
Arg: ->dir1/203142<-
Arg: ->dir1/203143<-
Arg: ->dir1/203144<-
Directory has a space in it
$ zeio ./myprog "dir two"
Arg: ->dir two/203225<-
Arg: ->dir two/203226<-
Arg: ->dir two/203227<-
filenames have whitespace in them
$ zeio ./myprog dir3
Arg: ->dir3/first
filename<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is second<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is 3rd<-
add a comment |
Bash doesn't yet make it easy to sort files by modification time, so here's the obligatory zsh-based answer. You don't have to switch to zsh as your login shell in order to use its features.
Here I set up a wrapper function that expects either one or two arguments; the first argument is the program to execute (e.g. myprogram
); the second, optional, argument is the directory containing the files that you want to pass to the program. If you don't specify a second argument, it defaults to the current directory.
zeio()
Name it whatever you like, of course. After a quick sanity-check of the second argument (again, defaulting to .
, the current directory), we call zsh with a single double-quoted string that contains the program (argument #1) and the directory (argument #2) -- defaulting to .
-- with a wildcard / glob expansion that has two "glob qualifiers" in the trailing parenthesis:
.
-- must be regular files (not directories or symlinks, etc)Om
--O
rder (sort) the resulting list by modification time, earliest first
It's that Om
glob qualifier that does all of the real work here.
Here's some sample runs; myprog
is a simple shell script to demonstrate the arguments it receives, in order:
#!/bin/sh
for arg do
printf 'Arg: ->%s<-n' "$arg"
done
and go.sh
is the file where I saved the function. The rest of the directory structure is:
$ tree .
.
├── dir1
│ ├── 203142
│ ├── 203143
│ └── 203144
├── dir3
│ ├── first12filename
│ ├── this is 3rd
│ └── this is second
├── dir two
│ ├── 203225
│ ├── 203226
│ └── 203227
├── go.sh
└── myprog
... where I've created the sets of three files in each subdirectory in the listed sequence; I expect to see them in this same order when I execute the function. The first filename under dir3 has a newline in it, represented by tree
with 12
. The results are:
Demonstrating the default-to-current-directory behavior:
$ zeio ./myprog
Arg: ->./myprog<-
Arg: ->./go.sh<-
Normal filename demonstration
$ zeio ./myprog dir1
Arg: ->dir1/203142<-
Arg: ->dir1/203143<-
Arg: ->dir1/203144<-
Directory has a space in it
$ zeio ./myprog "dir two"
Arg: ->dir two/203225<-
Arg: ->dir two/203226<-
Arg: ->dir two/203227<-
filenames have whitespace in them
$ zeio ./myprog dir3
Arg: ->dir3/first
filename<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is second<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is 3rd<-
Bash doesn't yet make it easy to sort files by modification time, so here's the obligatory zsh-based answer. You don't have to switch to zsh as your login shell in order to use its features.
Here I set up a wrapper function that expects either one or two arguments; the first argument is the program to execute (e.g. myprogram
); the second, optional, argument is the directory containing the files that you want to pass to the program. If you don't specify a second argument, it defaults to the current directory.
zeio()
Name it whatever you like, of course. After a quick sanity-check of the second argument (again, defaulting to .
, the current directory), we call zsh with a single double-quoted string that contains the program (argument #1) and the directory (argument #2) -- defaulting to .
-- with a wildcard / glob expansion that has two "glob qualifiers" in the trailing parenthesis:
.
-- must be regular files (not directories or symlinks, etc)Om
--O
rder (sort) the resulting list by modification time, earliest first
It's that Om
glob qualifier that does all of the real work here.
Here's some sample runs; myprog
is a simple shell script to demonstrate the arguments it receives, in order:
#!/bin/sh
for arg do
printf 'Arg: ->%s<-n' "$arg"
done
and go.sh
is the file where I saved the function. The rest of the directory structure is:
$ tree .
.
├── dir1
│ ├── 203142
│ ├── 203143
│ └── 203144
├── dir3
│ ├── first12filename
│ ├── this is 3rd
│ └── this is second
├── dir two
│ ├── 203225
│ ├── 203226
│ └── 203227
├── go.sh
└── myprog
... where I've created the sets of three files in each subdirectory in the listed sequence; I expect to see them in this same order when I execute the function. The first filename under dir3 has a newline in it, represented by tree
with 12
. The results are:
Demonstrating the default-to-current-directory behavior:
$ zeio ./myprog
Arg: ->./myprog<-
Arg: ->./go.sh<-
Normal filename demonstration
$ zeio ./myprog dir1
Arg: ->dir1/203142<-
Arg: ->dir1/203143<-
Arg: ->dir1/203144<-
Directory has a space in it
$ zeio ./myprog "dir two"
Arg: ->dir two/203225<-
Arg: ->dir two/203226<-
Arg: ->dir two/203227<-
filenames have whitespace in them
$ zeio ./myprog dir3
Arg: ->dir3/first
filename<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is second<-
Arg: ->dir3/this is 3rd<-
answered 5 mins ago
Jeff Schaller♦Jeff Schaller
45.1k1164147
45.1k1164147
add a comment |
add a comment |
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