I know it gets talked about quite a lot round here but I find zsh really quite useful for this type of thing..
the zsh equivalent of the above, for me would be
ls **/* -ltr
(Edit)[ for an exact reproduction ]
ls **/*(.) -ltr
if you wanted to put a date range on it.. for example, only files from the last 5 days..
ls **/*(m-5) -ltr
or the last 5 hours
ls **/*(mh-5) -ltr
there's loads more of these http://grml.org/zsh/zsh-lovers.html, obviously your shell is a matter of preference, and if you know bash or something similar well enough then the incentive to change is obviously lessened.. but personally I've found that a whole series of small improvements (for me) added up to a pretty large win
edit: as pointed out by pyre, my initial suggestion isn't an exact replica.. but was the first thing that came to mind for me.. i guess s/the\ zsh\ equivalent/something\ similar\ in\ zsh/
edit again:
/tmp/ $ mkdir -p /tmp/test1/test2/test3
/tmp/ $ touch /tmp/test1/test2/test3/test4
/tmp/ $ ls -ltr /tmp/test1/**/*(.)
-rw-r--r-- 1 usr grp 0 Aug 7 15:49 /tmp/test1/test2/test3/test4
/tmp/ $ find /tmp/test1 -type f -print0 | xargs -0 ls -ltr
-rw-r--r-- 1 usr grp 0 Aug 7 15:49 /tmp/test1/test2/test3/test4
Nice to know, thanks! But, how does it work with file names containing spaces (or other strange characters)?
Edit: just to clarify: my question concerns the zsh method. Regarding find+xargs, I wrote that comment :-)
Actually, this edit would be an answer to zap; HN does not let me reply directly to him: is it to prevent flame-wars?
Thats what the print0 arg in find and the --null arg in xargs are for.
print0 prints the file name followed by a NULL character (rather than newline)
Using the --null/-0 arg makes xargs look for NULLs as delimiters and treat everything else literally.
I've used `ls -ltr` for years, and just recently I wrote a recursive version with the help of my local LUG mailing list. Here is my favorite version (put into a script in ~/bin):
find(1) has an -ls built-in, thought the format is slightly different. You can also use -printf to suit. Also, later GNU finds make some uses of xargs unnecessary.
the zsh equivalent of the above, for me would be
(Edit)[ for an exact reproduction ] if you wanted to put a date range on it.. for example, only files from the last 5 days.. or the last 5 hours there's loads more of these http://grml.org/zsh/zsh-lovers.html, obviously your shell is a matter of preference, and if you know bash or something similar well enough then the incentive to change is obviously lessened.. but personally I've found that a whole series of small improvements (for me) added up to a pretty large winedit: as pointed out by pyre, my initial suggestion isn't an exact replica.. but was the first thing that came to mind for me.. i guess s/the\ zsh\ equivalent/something\ similar\ in\ zsh/
edit again: