./afile ./bfile
Find files in a specific date range - in this case, the first half of last year.
-newermt = modification time of the file is more recent than this date
GNU find allows any date specfication that GNU date would accept, e.g.
find . -type f -newermt "3 years ago" ! -newermt "2 years ago"
or
find . -type f -newermt "last monday"
This command uses -newerXY to show you the files that are modified since a specific date. I recommend looking for "-newerXY" on the manpage to get the specifics.
Example above will recursively find files in current directory created/modified in 2010.
This command finds all the files whose status has changed between the ctime of the older and newer . Very useful if you can see from an ls listing a block of consecutive files you want to move or delete, but can't figure out exactly the time range by date.
Any thoughts on this command? Does it work on your machine? Can you do the same thing with only 14 characters?
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