There is a very efficient and elegant solution using REPL.BAT - a hybrid JScript/batch utility that performs a regular expression search/replace on stdin and writes the result to stdout. REPL.BAT is pure script that will run natively on any Windows machine from XP onward. Full documentation is built into the script.
I use REPL.BAT twice. First to modify the output of DIR /B, filtering out lines that don't match the name template, and also extracting the Season and Episode values. The result is processed by FOR /F. Then for each file, a second REPL.BAT modifies the actual file and writes it to a temp file. Finally, the temp file is MOVEd to the original file name. The 2nd REPL makes both replacements in one pass. The replacement value is a JScript expression that determines which value to plug in, depending on the matched tag name.
This script will process all files in the current folder:
@echo off
for /f "delims=: tokens=1,2*" %%A in (
'dir /b /a-d s??e*.xml^|repl "^s(\d\d)e(\d\d)" "$1:$2:$&" ia'
) do (
type "%%C"|repl "(<(ID|EpisodeNumber)>).*?(</\2>)" "$1+($2=='ID'?'%%A':'%%B')+$3" j >"%%C.new"
move /y "%%C.new" "%%C" >nul
)
This second version will process an entire folder hierarchy. It only requires a slight modification to the DIR command and the initial REPL search string:
for /f "delims=: tokens=1,2*" %%A in (
'dir /b /s /a-d s??e*.xml^|repl "^.*\\s(\d\d)e(\d\d)" "$1:$2:$&" ia'
) do (
type "%%C"|repl "(<(ID|EpisodeNumber)>).*?(</\2>)" "$1+($2=='ID'?'%%A':'%%B')+$3" j >"%%C.new"
move /y "%%C.new" "%%C" >nul
)