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Given a group of files with the following naming convention:

datetime_restofname.txt

an example of which would be:

200906290700_somewordorphrase.txt

how could I batch change the mtime of the files to match the date and time in the filename?

1 Answer 1

7
$ for f in *.txt; do touch -t `echo $f | cut -f1 -d _` "$f"; done

This will set the file modtime to the date string before the underscore.

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  • Awesome! Thanks so much, sunny256! Sadly, I cannot upvote your excellent reply ("Vote Up requires 15 reputation"), but I deeply appreciate your taking the time to help. Jul 1, 2009 at 0:05
  • By the way, it would be awesome if Stack Overflow offered some easy way to shoot you a tip (via PayPal, etc) for your kind help. If you have a PayPal account, please let me know the associated email address - I'd like to beam over some beer money if that's OK. Jul 1, 2009 at 0:16
  • Sorry - forgot my email address: miles at tinyapps dot org Jul 1, 2009 at 0:22
  • Thanks a lot for the offer, just glad to help. :) I'm also very thankful that we in fact have free software to play around with in the first place, so by sending a small donation to the Free Software Foundation, some organization who works against software patents or something along that line will help keeping it available for free. But it's a good idea, and SO has sort of implemented it with the bounty feature.
    – sunny256
    Jul 1, 2009 at 0:52
  • I slightly modified the script you kindly provided to process files in subdirectories as well: for f in find -name *.txt; do touch -t echo $f | cut -f1 -d _ | tr -d [:alpha:][:punct:] "$f"; done Jul 1, 2009 at 0:59

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