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I use the notability app on the iphone & ipad to save class notes but it saves them with awkward file names such as:

"Title Sep 29, 2014 - 2nd Description blah blah.pdf"
"Title Oct 1, 2014 - 2nd Description blah blah.pdf"

This makes it difficult to sort the files in windows file explorer by date as it sorts it alphabetically and the month is the first thing it sorts due to the file name.

I would like to change the file name structure to:
"YYYY-MM-DD - Title - Description blah blah.pdf"

I assume I would need a for loop to use the ren command but the difficulty I'm having is reading the filename and changing the string structure. The title and 2nd description will vary and be composed of more than one word so it cannot be a hard coded string which makes this even trickier. Anybody have any suggestions? Thanks.

1
  • 1
    That's too tough for a BAT program, it does not shine for processing strings and dates. It might be better done in any full featured programming language.
    – PA.
    Nov 30, 2014 at 20:39

2 Answers 2

4

"Too tough for batch"? I see the comedians are loose again...

Now it would have been good to have some real examples, but this should work.

@ECHO Off
SETLOCAL
SET "sourcedir=U:\sourcedir\t w o"
FOR %%a IN ("%sourcedir%\*.pdf") DO (
 SET "oname=%%a"
 FOR /f "tokens=1,2*delims=,-" %%c IN ("%%~nxa") DO (
  SET "oldendname=%%e"
  CALL :formdate %%d %%c
 )
)

GOTO :EOF
:: parameters are yyyy unknown* Mon dd
:formdate
SET /a yyyy=%1 2>NUL
IF %ERRORLEVEL% neq 0 GOTO :EOF 
SET "newtitle="
:formloop
SHIFT
IF "%~3" neq "" SET "newtitle=%newtitle% %~1"&GOTO formloop
SET "mm="
FOR %%z IN (
 "Jan=01" "Feb=02" "Mar=03" "Apr=04" "May=05" "Jun=06" 
 "Jul=07" "Aug=08" "Sep=09" "Oct=10" "Nov=11" "Dec=12"
 ) DO FOR /f "tokens=1,2delims==" %%m IN (%%z) DO IF "%%m"=="%1" SET "mm=%%n"
IF NOT DEFINED mm GOTO :EOF 
SET /a dd=100+%2

ECHO(REN "%oname%" "%yyyy%-%mm%-%dd:~-2%%newtitle% -%oldendname%"
GOTO :eof

You would need to change the setting of sourcedir to suit your circumstances.

The required REN commands are merely ECHOed for testing purposes. After you've verified that the commands are correct, change ECHO(REN to REN to actually rename the files.

[Edit : fixed to include extension]

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  • Clever - but insane. Frankly, this is a good example of why you should user VBScript ... or Powershell ... or ANYTHING besides .bat files syntax. IMHO...
    – paulsm4
    Dec 1, 2014 at 0:59
  • I am just a ordinary PC-user but everytime i see your solutions @Magoo i want to be programmer. Good work.
    – John DOE
    Dec 1, 2014 at 1:04
  • LMFAO. It worked. flawlessly. I added .pdf in the 2nd filename of the ren. Dec 1, 2014 at 1:20
  • Ah - yes. Found I'd named my test files ....pdf.pdf fixed so that extension is included in oldendname so that the filename-mask needs only to be changed in one place if it's changed.
    – Magoo
    Dec 1, 2014 at 1:59
  • @JohnDOE : Not a well-thought-out ambition, unfortunately. Nowadays, every florist, jockey and train-driver is demanding their "right" to be educated in programming at public expense in order to get the big bucks. The government pours money into "education." Meanwhile, people with decades of experience are excluded from jobs because of the abundance of cheap "new grads" with expertise learned from books. After 13 jobless years, having one expert describe the job as "too tough" is a red rag to a bull. It may be insane to tackle the job in this way - is it as insane as public "education" policy?
    – Magoo
    Dec 1, 2014 at 2:10
0

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.

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