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On Tuesday 09 November 2004 08:40 am, Jeff Kinz wrote: > On Mon, Nov 08, 2004 at 10:03:13PM -0800, John J. Herda wrote: > > 4. Of lesser importance, how do I get the date to display as > > yyyy-mm-dd in file listings etc. as I can in Windows 98? > > Get the source code for the ls command and modify it. ?There is no > option (currently) for "ls" to display the date that way. (Unless its > undocumented, a possibility) > Or were you refering to one of the new GUI tools? ?(And if so, which > one?) John, Jeff is mistaken. The ls command does indeed use YYYY-MM-DD style dates when you have the appropriate locale configured (as do many other commands): nturner at codeine(~)$ locale LANG=en_US.UTF-8 ... nturner at codeine(~)$ ls -l .bash_history -rw------- 1 nturner nturner 10258 2004-11-11 01:22 .bash_history On a Debian system one runs "dpkg-reconfigure locales" to choose which locales are are installed and which is the default. You may already have a suitable locale installed; try this: LANG=en_US ls -l or LANG=en_US.UTF-8 ls -l and let us know if you have any luck. (If one of those works for you, you will probably want to put the appropriate "LANG=..." line in /etc/environment.) Cheers, nate -- Nathaniel W. Turner http://www.houseofnate.net/ Tel: +1 508 579 1948 (mobile)
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