I want to delete duplicate files made by itunes, which all end in " 1.mp3". I've come close to matching but I don't know how to match the space. Can somebody writeup a command to recursively delete those files from the current directory?
6 Answers
You want to go through your iTunes collection and remove Nickelback's If I care 1.mp3 but, only if the Nickelback original MP3, If I care.mp3, still exist. Right?
Hey, your musical tastes are up to you...
This should do the trick:
find -name "* 1.mp3" | while read file
do
if [ -e "${file% 1.mp3}.mp3" ]
then
rm $file
fi
done
I am finding all the duplicates (songs that end in space-1.mp3) and piping them to the while
statement.
The ${word%filter}
syntax says take the $word
and remove from the right hand side the glob expression filter
. Thus, ${file% 1.mp3}
is the name of the file sans the 1.mp3
suffix. Now, If I care 1.mp3
becomes If I care
. We, therefore need to add the .mp3
suffix back on. Thus ${file% 1.mp3}.mp3
. This gives us the original name of the file.
Now, we use -e
test to check if that file exists. If it does, we can delete the space-1.mp3 version of the song.
I ran some basic tests, but I suggest you try it out first (maybe change rm $file
to echo Removing file $file
first and verifying that those files do have the original).
-
My apologies for replying so late, It worked perfectly, and thanks for the great explanation.– ChironexDec 29, 2011 at 15:50
Similar to other solutions, but checks that the file without the " 1" suffix really exists, so it does not accidentaly remove songs whose names end in " 1".
shopt -s globstar
for file in **/*' '1.mp3 ; do
if [[ -f "${file% 1.mp3}.mp3" ]] ; then
rm "$file"
fi
done
-
there's a loophole here when the
file.mp3
is actually a symlink tofile 1.mp3
. Besides, you could do a checksum to see whether the files are really the same... oops you could do a fuzzy check in case the encoding/tags were different. Getting rather sidetracked now– seheNov 13, 2011 at 21:54
find . -type f -name '* 1.mp3' -print0 | xargs -0 rm
which kbyrd mentions is the best way according to me because of the -print0 and -0 combination because.
-print0 True; print the full file name on the standard output, followed by a null character (instead of the newline character that -print uses). This allows file names that contain newlines or other types of white space to be correctly interpreted by pro‐ grams that process the find output. This option corresponds to the -0 option of xargs.