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I want to use "find" to rename a bunch of files, with the rename simply being the removal of part of the extension. EXAMPLE: abc.ext.DELAYED --> abc.ext

I've tried the following, but they simply aren't working:

find . -name *.DELAYED -execdir mv {} $(echo {} | sed 's:\.DELAYED::') \;
find . -name *.DELAYED -execdir mv {} $(echo {} | cut -f 1 -d".") \;
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2 Answers 2

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There are two problems with your commands.

The first problem is the * in the command. You need to enclose it in a string since otherwise bash would expand it as a glob expression - * expands to all files in the current folder.

The command should look like this:

find . -name '*.DELAYED' ...

The second problem is that command substitutions happen before the command gets executed meaning

$(echo {})

would expaneded to the literal {} will would lead to a command like

mv file1 file1

You can execute the command in a shell instead:

... -execdir bash -c 'mv {} $(echo {} | cut -f2 -d.)' \;
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  • 1
    That's one thing. But there is yet another issue - command substitution is done before the command is run. Apr 17, 2015 at 16:43
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You have specifically tagged this question with "linux", so I assume that your distribution has the rename tool installed, which is bundled in util-linux package.

This avoids command substitution issues and chaining multiple programs:

find . -name '*.DELAYED' -execdir rename .DELAYED '' {} \;
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  • Yes, using rename is much better than the command substitution construct.
    – hek2mgl
    Apr 17, 2015 at 17:42

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