this post was submitted on 21 Sep 2024
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[โ€“] friend_of_satan@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

Check out rename

$ touch foo{1..5}.txt
$ rename -v 's/foo/bar/' foo*
foo1.txt renamed as bar1.txt
foo2.txt renamed as bar2.txt
foo3.txt renamed as bar3.txt
foo4.txt renamed as bar4.txt
foo5.txt renamed as bar5.txt
$ rename -v 's/\.txt/.text/' *.txt
bar1.txt renamed as bar1.text
bar2.txt renamed as bar2.text
bar3.txt renamed as bar3.text
bar4.txt renamed as bar4.text
bar5.txt renamed as bar5.text
$ rename -v 's/(.*)\.text/1234-$1.txt/' *.text
bar1.text renamed as 1234-bar1.txt
bar2.text renamed as 1234-bar2.txt
bar3.text renamed as 1234-bar3.txt
bar4.text renamed as 1234-bar4.txt
bar5.text renamed as 1234-bar5.txt
[โ€“] electric_nan@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

In your second example, it looks like you have an escape character before the first 'dot', but not the second one. Is this a typo, or am I misunderstanding the command?

[โ€“] friend_of_satan@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

It's not a typo. The first section of the regex is a matching section, where a dot means "match any character", and an escaped dot is a literal dot character. The second section is the replacement section, and you don't have to escape the dot there because that section isn't matching anything. You can escape it though if it makes the code easier to read.

rename is written in Perl so all Perl regular expression syntaxes are valid.

However, your comment did make me realize that I hadn't escaped a dot in the third example! So I fixed that.

[โ€“] 0_0j@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

SED combinator, you win ๐Ÿ™Œ