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I am trying to make a shell script to remove special characters, like {}()!,' etc. So far I have referenced a past question I asked here, however I get a strange error message:

-bash-3.2$ ./test2.sh
./test2.sh: line 7: unexpected EOF while looking for matching `"'
./test2.sh: line 10: syntax error: unexpected end of file

test2.sh

#!/bin/bash
shopt -s nullglob
for file in *
do
        if [ -f "$file" ]; then
        newfile="`echo $file | tr -d '[{}(),\!]' | tr -d "\'" | sed 's/_-_/_/g'`"
        mv "$file" "$newfile"
        fi
done

Not sure where I am going wrong on this one, the files are named like:

Folder - 01
Folder 02!
Folder(03)
Folder Four_Three

The desired output would be

Folder 01
Folder 02
Folder 03
Folder Four Three

Thank you in advance.

3 Answers 3

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shopt -s extglob
shopt -s nullglob
for i in *; do echo "mv $i ${i//[[:punct:]]/}"; done
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  • This is the closest answer so far, it runs the script, appears to run, but when I run ls -la it doesn't show the changes as made.
    – eddylol
    Sep 27, 2010 at 3:29
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You're missing a double-quote in the if test.

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  • Thanks for pointing that out! However when I added it and re-ran it, it is still giving me the unexpected EOF error.
    – eddylol
    Sep 27, 2010 at 2:35
  • Worked for me in Cygwin bash. However, the double-quotes surrounding the definition of newfile are superfluous and may be conflicting with the double-quotes around the string argument to the second tr. Try removing the outer double-quotes. Sep 27, 2010 at 2:40
  • Its strange, it runs, but it doesn't fix any of the folders that are named Folder(03), Folder 02!, etc
    – eddylol
    Sep 27, 2010 at 2:43
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You are testing whether $file is a file, but you apparently want to rename directories (unless you have non-directory files named "Folder*"). Change your test to:

if [ -d "$file" ]; then

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