3

I have a list of files (thousands of them) like this:

/path/2010 - filename.txt
/path/2011 - another file name.txt

Always following this pattern: #### - string.txt

I need to change them to look like this:

/path/filename (2010).txt
/path/another file name (2011).txt

How can I do this quickly with bash, shell, terminal, etc.?

4 Answers 4

6

Try rename command:

rename -n 's/(.*) - (.*)(\.txt)/$2 ($1)$3/' *.txt

-n(--no-act) option is for preview.
Remove -n to perform substitution.

4
  • Shoot, my Mac doesn't have rename (-bash: rename: command not found). Can I do this with mv?
    – Ryan
    Aug 16, 2012 at 16:00
  • 2
    If *.txt expands to too many files for one command line, find /path -name '*.txt' -print0 | xargs -0 rename -n ...
    – chepner
    Aug 16, 2012 at 16:01
  • rename is a tiny perl script. I think you can install it in MAC.
    – kev
    Aug 16, 2012 at 16:03
  • Love rename, especially the -n part
    – sebisnow
    Feb 22, 2021 at 13:59
3

Untested.

find /path -name '???? - *.txt' -print0 | while read -d ''; do
    [[ $REPLY =~ (.*)/(....)\ -\ (.*)\.txt$ ]] || continue

    path=${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
    year=${BASH_REMATCH[2]}
    str=${BASH_REMATCH[3]}
    echo mv "$REPLY" "$path/$str ($year).txt"
done

Remove the echo once the generated mv commands look right.

3
  • How can I add slashes to escape the spaces in the path and file names?
    – Ryan
    Aug 16, 2012 at 16:16
  • (.*) should greedily match everything up to the final slash, spaces and all. '\ ' is escaping the spaces in the file name proper. I don't think there should be any other issues with spaces.
    – chepner
    Aug 16, 2012 at 16:30
  • Doh, unescaped spaces only showed up in echo. Mv worked just fine. Thanks. Giving you the "answer" because it worked without another library. Thanks again.
    – Ryan
    Aug 16, 2012 at 16:46
2

I know you didn't tag it with zsh but you did say shell. Anyway here's how to do it with the zmv function in zsh:

autoload zmv                      # It's not loaded by default
zmv -nvw '* - *.*' '$2 ($1).$3'

Remove -n when you're happy with the output.

-v makes zmv verbose. -w implicitly makes a group of each wildcard.

1

I'd prefer to add this as a comment, but I'm not yet allowed to.

I asked a similar question and received a number of helpful answers over here:

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/37355/recursively-rename-subdirectories-that-match-a-regex

Perhaps one of those solutions can be adapted to suit you needs.

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