Even on *Nix platforms you cannot not reliably do thisTo clarify: (from the unix-faq):
3.1) How do I find the creation time of a file? You can't - it isn't stored anywhere. Files have a last-modified time (shown by "ls -l"), a last-accessed time (shown by "ls -lu") and an inode change time (shown by "ls -lc"). The latter is often referred to as the "creation time" - even in some man pages - but that's wrong; it's also set by such operations as mv, ln, chmod, chown and chgrp. The man page for "stat(2)" discusses this.
In reply to Re: Re: Quickest way to get the oldest file
by jweed
in thread Quickest way to get the oldest file
by Anonymous Monk
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |