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I am new to linux. How can I print and store date in given date range.

For example I have startdate=2013-03-01 and enddate = 2013-03-25 ; I want to print all date in that range.

Thanks in advance

0

7 Answers 7

20

As long as the dates are in YYYY-MM-DD format, you can compare them lexicographically, and let date do the calendar arithmetic without converting to seconds first:

startdate=2013-03-15
enddate=2013-04-14

curr="$startdate"
while true; do
    echo "$curr"
    [ "$curr" \< "$enddate" ] || break
    curr=$( date +%Y-%m-%d --date "$curr +1 day" )
done

With [ ... ], you need to escape the < to avoid confusion with the input redirection operator.

This does have the wart of printing the start date if it is greater than the end date.

2
  • So, just do the echo "$curr" after the test ;). date --date "$curr +1 day" is nicer than the let cur=.. Mar 25, 2013 at 20:06
  • It's probably better to put this in a for loop rather than a while loop to be safe. If you parameterize your startdate and enddate within a script, with the loop running max of say 366 times or 1000 times. This will keep it from infinitely looping.
    – ekangas
    Sep 4, 2013 at 19:56
9

An alternate if you want 'recent' dates is:

echo {100..1} | xargs -I{} -d ' ' date --date={}' days ago' +"%Y-%m-%d"

Obviously won't work for arbitrary date ranges.

1
  • this is close of the best answer I think, I made a change with it: $ startdate='2016-03-01'; echo {0..10} | xargs -I{} -d ' ' date --date="$startdate +"{}" days" +"%Y-%m-%d" 2016-03-01 2016-03-02 2016-03-03 .... Jan 11, 2018 at 18:37
9

Another option is to use dateseq from dateutils (http://www.fresse.org/dateutils/#dateseq):

$ dateseq 2013-03-01 2013-03-25
2013-03-01
2013-03-02
2013-03-03
2013-03-04
2013-03-05
2013-03-06
2013-03-07
2013-03-08
2013-03-09
2013-03-10
2013-03-11
2013-03-12
2013-03-13
2013-03-14
2013-03-15
2013-03-16
2013-03-17
2013-03-18
2013-03-19
2013-03-20
2013-03-21
2013-03-22
2013-03-23
2013-03-24
2013-03-25
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  • Nice! In Vim: :read ! dateseq 2018-12-04 2019-12-31. :read appends output to current buffer (file); ! executes the external (BASH) command (dateseq ...). Dec 2, 2018 at 18:37
  • This was huge for me. Thank you.
    – Barett
    Sep 23, 2021 at 20:50
3

Use date to convert your dates to seconds, do a little maths and convert back:

#/bin/bash

dstart=2013-03-01
dend=2013-03-25
# convert in seconds sinch the epoch:
start=$(date -d$dstart +%s)
end=$(date -d$dend +%s)
cur=$start

while [ $cur -le $end ]; do
    # convert seconds to date:
    date -d@$cur +%Y-%m-%d
    let cur+=24*60*60
done

See man date for more info on date parameters..

1

Slightly improved version

#!/bin/bash
startdate=2013-03-15
enddate=2013-04-14

curr="$startdate"
while true; do
    [ "$curr" \< "$enddate" ] || { echo "$curr"; break; }
    echo "$curr"
    curr=$( date +%Y-%m-%d --date "$curr +1 day" )
done
1

one line version:

seq 0 24 | xargs -I {} date  +"%Y-%m-%d" -d '20130301 {}day'

# this version is ok if the dates not cross next month
seq -f'%.f'  20130301 20130325
1
  • 3
    Please add further details to expand on your answer, such as working code or documentation citations.
    – Community Bot
    Sep 7, 2021 at 6:41
0

A simple demo

start_date="20191021"                                                                        
end_date="20191025"                                                                          
dates=()                                                                                     
while [[ "${start_date}" != "${end_date}" ]];do                                              
  formatted_date=$(date -d "${start_date}" +"%Y%m%d")                                        
  dates+=( "${formatted_date}" )                                                                                                                                
  start_date=$(date -d "$start_date +1 day" +"%Y%m%d")                                       
done 

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