136

I have many file types: pdf, tiff, jpeg, bmp. etc. My question is how can I change file extension? I tried this:

my file= c:/my documents/my images/cars/a.jpg;
string extension = Path.GetExtension(myffile);
myfile.replace(extension,".Jpeg");

No matter what type of file it is, the format I specify must be with the file name. But it does not work. I get file path from browser like c:\..\..\a.jpg, and the file format is a.jpeg. So, when I try to delete it, it gives me an error: Cannot find the file on specified path'. So, I am thinking it has something to do with the file extension that does not match. So, I am trying to convert .jpg to .jpeg and delete the file then.

1
  • How does it not work, (apart from being far from compiling)? Mar 10, 2011 at 13:04

6 Answers 6

299

There is: Path.ChangeExtension method. E.g.:

var result = Path.ChangeExtension(myffile, ".jpg");

In the case if you also want to physically change the extension, you could use File.Move method:

File.Move(myffile, Path.ChangeExtension(myffile, ".jpg"));
7
  • so will it change the extension to jpg? of original file?
    – safi
    Mar 10, 2011 at 13:12
  • @Alex I am not moving a file, i get file path from broswer like c:\..\..\a.jpg, and the file format on physical path is a.Jpeg, so when i try to delete it, it gives me error cannot find the file on specified path. so i am thinking it has some to do with the file extension is not matching. so i am trying to convert jpg to Jpeg and delete the file then.
    – safi
    Mar 10, 2011 at 13:26
  • 3
    @safi: I doubt that changing file extension to e.g. uppercase will locate a file on the disk. Are you sure the file c:\..\..\a.jpg (in your example) is really exists? If yes, maybe you don't have enough priviledges to delete this file? And finally, if you just want to replace file extension use var newFilePath = Path.ChangeExtension(myffile, ".Jpg");; the newFilePath will contain a new file name with changed extension, physically, the file name (on disk) won't be changed.
    – Oleks
    Mar 10, 2011 at 13:41
  • 1
    @safi: see, this var newPath = Path.ChangeExtension("c:/my documents/my images/cars/a where a is a.jpg", string.Empty) will remove the extension from the path defined as the first method parameter; the newPath string variable will contain c:/my documents/my images/cars/a where a is a. value after this operation.
    – Oleks
    Mar 10, 2011 at 14:50
  • 4
    There are so many things we do create code for, but already exists in the .NET fx. File.Move & Path.ChangeExtension. Cool ! :-)
    – Legends
    Dec 23, 2016 at 12:06
24

You should do a move of the file to rename it. In your example code you are only changing the string, not the file:

myfile= "c:/my documents/my images/cars/a.jpg";
string extension = Path.GetExtension(myffile); 
myfile.replace(extension,".Jpeg");

you are only changing myfile (which is a string). To move the actual file, you should do

FileInfo f = new FileInfo(myfile);
f.MoveTo(Path.ChangeExtension(myfile, ".Jpeg"));

See FileInfo.MoveTo

3
  • I am not moving a file, i get file path from broswer like c:\..\..\a.jpg, and the file format on physical path is a.Jpeg, so when i try to delete it, it gives me error cannot find the file on specified path. so i am thinking it has some to do with the file extension is not matching. so i am trying to convert jpg to Jpeg and delete the file then
    – safi
    Mar 10, 2011 at 13:30
  • The first code does not do any replacing. You need to do myfile=myfile.Replace(extension,".Jpeg"); Aug 20, 2018 at 6:00
  • CAUTION: the extension may also be part of the filename! As in "my.pdf-file.pdf".
    – CodeSmile
    Mar 2 at 13:58
12

try this.

filename = Path.ChangeExtension(".blah") 

in you Case:

myfile= c:/my documents/my images/cars/a.jpg;
string extension = Path.GetExtension(myffile);
filename = Path.ChangeExtension(myfile,".blah") 

You should look this post too:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.path.changeextension.aspx

4

The method GetFileNameWithoutExtension, as the name implies, does not return the extension on the file. In your case, it would only return "a". You want to append your ".Jpeg" to that result. However, at a different level, this seems strange, as image files have different metadata and cannot be converted so easily.

0
1

Convert file format to png

string newfilename , 
 string filename = "~/Photo/"  + lbl_ImgPath.Text.ToString();/*get filename from specific path where we store image*/
 string newfilename = Path.ChangeExtension(filename, ".png");/*Convert file format from jpg to png*/
0

Alternative to using Path.ChangeExtension

string ChangeFileExtension(ReadOnlySpan<char> path, ReadOnlySpan<char> extension)
{
    var lastPeriod = path.LastIndexOf('.');
    return string.Concat(path[..lastPeriod], extension);
}

string myfile= @"C:/my documents/my images/cars/a.jpg";
string changedFileExtesion = ChangeFileExtension(myfile, ".jpeg");

Console.WriteLine(changedFileExtesion);
// output: C:/my documents/my images/cars/a.jpeg

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