New solution using JREN.BAT version 2
For those that like regular expressions, this is very simple using JREN.BAT version 2 - a hybrid JScript/batch command line utility that renames files or folders by applying a regular expression search and replace to the name. JREN.BAT is pure script that runs natively on any Windows machine from XP onward.
This simple one line liner will rename files in the current directory:
jren "^(.* )([A-Z][a-z]{2} \d\d?, \d{4}) -" "ts({dt:$2,fmt:'{iso-dt}'})+' - '+$1+'-'" /j /fm *.pdf
Add the /P rootPath
option to rename files in a different directory.
Add the /S
option to recursively rename files in all the sub-directories
If you are worried about false date matches, you could make the regex more precise:
jren "^(.* )((?:Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec) \d\d?, \d{4}) -" "ts({dt:$2,fmt:'{iso-dt}'})+' - '+$1+'-'" /j /fm *.pdf
Here is the original solution using version 1
Here are two alternative solutions using JREN.BAT:
@echo off
setlocal
set "src=."
if "%~1" neq "" set "src=%~1"
:: ($1-) ($2-) ($3-) ($4-) ($5-) ($6-) ($7-) ($8-) ($9-) ($10) ($11) ($12) ($13) ($14--) ($15--)($16------------)
set "find=^(.+?) (?:(Jan)|(Feb)|(Mar)|(Apr)|(May)|(Jun)|(Jul)|(Aug)|(Sep)|(Oct)|(Nov)|(Dec)) (\d\d?), (\d{4})((?: - .+)?\.pdf)$"
set "repl=for (i=1; i<=12; i++) if (eval('$'+(i+1))) rtn=$15+'-'+lpad(i,'00')+'-'+lpad($14,'00')+' - '+$1+$16; rtn;"
call jren "%find%" "%repl%" /j /i /p "%src%"
or
@echo off
setlocal
set "src=."
if "%~1" neq "" set "src=%~1"
:: ($1-) ($2--------------------------------------------------------------)($3-------------)
set "find=^(.+?) ((?:Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec) \d\d?, \d{4})((?: - .+)?\.pdf)$"
set "repl=dt=new Date($2); dt.getFullYear()+'-'+lpad(dt.getMonth()+1,'00')+'-'+lpad(dt.getDate(),'00')+' - '+$1+$3;"
call jren "%find%" "%repl%" /j /i /p "%src%"
Name either of the above as renameNotes.bat
, and then use renameNotes
without arguments to rename files in the current directory, or renameNotes somePath
to rename files in a particular folder. The script can safely be run multiple times - it will only rename files that require it.
As it stands now, the above solutions require a fair amount of user supplied JScript code. I think I may add a built-in date formatter to JREN.BAT in the near future that would make this even simpler.