0

So, the script should take in a file extension and possibly multiple files to change their extensions. It works for most, but when the file has a space in it, it changes it and then says the file does not exist. Heres what I have...

#!/bin/sh
fileExtension="$1"
shift
oldName="$@"
extension=${oldName##*.}
totalFiles=$#
totalFiles=$(( totalFiles+1 ))

num=1
while [ $num -lt $totalFiles ]
do
   for i in "$oldName"
   do
      extension=${i##*.}
      if test -e "$i" then
          newName="${i%.*}.$fileExtension"
          if [ "$i" = "$newName" ]
          then
             :
          else
              mv "$i" "$newName"
          fi
      else
          echo "$i": No such file
      fi
      num=$(( num+1 ))
      shift
      done
done

3 Answers 3

0

You cannot iterate a string, as least not the way you are. oldName needs to be an array

# other stuff
oldName=("$@")
# other stuff
for i in "${oldName[@]}"
# other stuff
2
  • Well, trying to change it to that didn't work, it just created an abundance of errors.
    – Monkeybutt
    May 21, 2013 at 1:41
  • Why not just for i in "$@" (or even for i, though personally I'd never write that in a script, for all it means the same thing)? You can then avoid the shift in the body of the loop, too. May 21, 2013 at 3:00
0

Why not simplify it:

#!/bin/sh
fileExtension="$1"
shift
for file in "$@"
do
    extension=${file##*.}
    if [ -e "$file" ]
    then
        newName="${file%.*}.$fileExtension"
        if [ "$file" != "$newName" ]
        then mv "$file" "$newName"
        fi
    else
        echo "$file: No such file" >&2
    fi
done
3
  • So, you're right, I should have simplified it but it still reads a file with a space in the middle as two different files. I thought the extension part would take care of that but apparently not.
    – Monkeybutt
    May 21, 2013 at 18:11
  • Since the script shown reads the command line arguments, the question may be 'How are you invoking the script?' If the script is testscript, then running testscript * should pass each file name as a separate argument, even if the file name contains spaces. The code shown would work correctly. On the other hand, if you have another script invoking it, and its list of filenames isn't properly constructed (perhaps the other script contains testscript $* instead of the correct testscript "$@"), then you end up with file names that contain spaces being broken. May 21, 2013 at 18:16
  • I'd consider writing extension="${file##*.}" simply because I'm very cautious about variables that might contain spaces. However, some of that dates back to learning on the (original) Bourne shell in the early 80s, and I'm told that it isn't necessary. However, that's the only line that isn't fully protected. You can either run the script with sh -x testscript or add set -x at the top of the script to see how the shell is interpreting the script. May 21, 2013 at 18:18
0

I got it with this...

#!/bin/sh
fileExtension="$1"
shift
for file in "$@"
do
    if test -e "$file"
    then
    newName="${file%.*}.$fileExtension"
        if test "$file" = "$newName"
        then
        :
        else
            mv "$file" "${file%.*}.$fileExtension"
    fi
    else
        echo "$file": No such file >&2
    fi
done

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.