 Okay, hello and welcome. I do want to start off just by saying I sliced my finger open the other day and I have a bandaid on my finger and it's making it a little difficult to type. So if I mess up, that's why my bandaid keeps getting caught on the keyboard. Anyway, I have some files in a directory. I just created them randomly here. If I list them out with information, you can see that some of them were made today. Some of them were made yesterday and a couple of them were made two days ago. Okay, so let's say I want to list just the ones made today. All the times when you try to search this, the answer you'll get is using the find command dash mtime and then dash one. What this does is it looks for everything created in the last day. So if I do that, the dash one is the number of days. So I'm gonna run that and you can see that it lists out some files. The problem is some of these files, again, if I list them out like so, you can see, for example, this file, 1487, was made yesterday, but it lists it here. The reason for that is because this isn't looking for stuff today, it's looking for things made in the last days, the last 24 hours. So if something was made yesterday, but in the last 24 hours, it's gonna show up. So how do you find things that were found just today? So what we're gonna use, we're gonna use the find command and we're gonna say dash newer. So we're gonna want newer mt and then we're going to give it a date. So today I'll say 2021 dash 11 dash 08. I'll hit enter and it will list just the files created today. Of course, if you were to alias this or create a script for it, something you could do would be to use the date command plus percent capital F. And so that will put in today's date whatever it is. So you can create some sort of shortcut for this if this is a command that you're gonna have to run regularly or if you're gonna put it in a script and you don't know what day it's gonna be, you just want that. Let's say you want a script that goes in, looks at a directory and does something with all the files that were created each day because there might be older files in there, but you just wanted to modify the files that were created or modified today. So that's how you would do that there. It's gonna give me the same output as this up here. It's just using a command as a variable. So that's it, little quick one there. I hope you find this useful. Please visit filmsbychrist.com. That's Chris of the K. There is a link in the description as always. I hope that you have a great day.