Note that glob '*' won't honour dotfiles. And why sort in the first place when you just want the oldest file? Using the convenient List::Util module you can emulate the structure of a Schwartzian Transform without sorting in this case:
use List::Util qw(reduce); opendir DIR, "."; print @{ reduce { $a->[1] < $b->[1] ? $a : $b } map { -f $_ ? [$_, (stat _)[9]] : () } readdir DIR }->[0], $/; closedir DIR;
And without a module:
opendir DIR, "."; my ($oldest, @file) = map { -f $_ ? [$_, (stat _)[9]] : () } readdir D +IR; closedir DIR; while(my $cur = shift @file) { $oldest = $cur if $oldest->[1] > $cur->[1]; } print $oldest->[0], $/;

Makeshifts last the longest.


In reply to Re: Print the oldest file in a directory. by Aristotle
in thread Print the oldest file in a directory. by gnu@perl

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