22

How would I write a batch or cmd file that will rename all files in a directory? I am using Windows.

Change this:

750_MOT_Forgiving_120x90.jpg
751_MOT_Persecution_1_120x90.jpg
752_MOT_Persecution_2_120x90.jpg
753_MOT_Hatred_120x90.jpg
754_MOT_Suffering_120x90.jpg
755_MOT_Freedom_of_Religion_120x90.jpg
756_MOT_Layla_Testimony_1_120x90.jpg
757_MOT_Layla_Testimony_2_120x90.jpg

To this:

750_MOT_Forgiving_67x100.jpg
751_MOT_Persecution_1_67x100.jpg
752_MOT_Persecution_2_67x100.jpg
753_MOT_Hatred_67x100.jpg
754_MOT_Suffering_67x100.jpg
755_MOT_Freedom_of_Religion_67x100.jpg
756_MOT_Layla_Testimony_1_67x100.jpg
757_MOT_Layla_Testimony_2_67x100.jpg
2
  • 1
    windows and whatever runs in a .bat or .cmd file?
    – Blainer
    Feb 21, 2012 at 18:30
  • Dude, if you want help you can't expect everyone to be psychic. Feb 21, 2012 at 18:36

2 Answers 2

37

A FOR statement to loop through the names (type FOR /? for help), and string search and replace (type SET /? for help).

@echo off
setlocal enableDelayedExpansion
for %%F in (*120x90.jpg) do (
  set "name=%%F"
  ren "!name!" "!name:120x90=67x100!"
)


UPDATE - 2012-11-07

I've investigated how the RENAME command deals with wildcards: How does the Windows RENAME command interpret wildcards?

It turns out that this particular problem can be very easily solved using the RENAME command without any need for a batch script.

ren *_120x90.jpg *_67x100.*

The number of characters after the _ does not matter. The rename would still work properly if 120x90 became x or xxxxxxxxxx. The important aspect of this problem is that the entire text between the last _ and the . is replaced.

3
  • 3
    I'm not sure if this is a complete example. But This worked for me like a charm :) Nov 7, 2012 at 4:09
  • 2
    @Anand - I've added a much simpler solution using just the REN command. The link in your comment is basically the same as my original answer.
    – dbenham
    Nov 7, 2012 at 5:35
  • Can you split out your two answers? I would leave the ren one-liner in this one; it's the best! Mar 20, 2014 at 11:02
11

As of Windows 7 you can do this in one line of PowerShell.

powershell -C "gci | % {rni $_.Name ($_.Name -replace '120x90', '67x100')}"

Explanation

powershell -C "..." launches a PowerShell session to run the quoted command. It returns to the outer shell when the command completes. -C is short for -Command.

gci returns all the files in the current directory. It is an alias for Get-ChildItem.

| % {...} makes a pipeline to process each file. % is an alias for Foreach-Object.

$_.Name is the name of the current file in the pipeline.

($_.Name -replace '120x90', '67x100') uses the -replace operator to create the new file name. Each occurrence of the first substring is replaced with the second substring.

rni changes the name of each file. The first parameter (called -Path) identifies the file. The second parameter (called -NewName) specifies the new name. rni is an alias for Rename-Item.

Example

$ dir
 Volume in drive C has no label.
 Volume Serial Number is A817-E7CA

 Directory of C:\fakedir\test

11/09/2013  16:57    <DIR>          .
11/09/2013  16:57    <DIR>          ..
11/09/2013  16:56                 0 750_MOT_Forgiving_120x90.jpg
11/09/2013  16:57                 0 751_MOT_Persecution_1_120x90.jpg
11/09/2013  16:57                 0 752_MOT_Persecution_2_120x90.jpg
               3 File(s)              0 bytes
               2 Dir(s)  243,816,271,872 bytes free

$ powershell -C "gci | % {rni $_.Name ($_.Name -replace '120x90', '67x100')}"

$ dir
 Volume in drive C has no label.
 Volume Serial Number is A817-E7CA

 Directory of C:\fakedir\test

11/09/2013  16:57    <DIR>          .
11/09/2013  16:57    <DIR>          ..
11/09/2013  16:56                 0 750_MOT_Forgiving_67x100.jpg
11/09/2013  16:57                 0 751_MOT_Persecution_1_67x100.jpg
11/09/2013  16:57                 0 752_MOT_Persecution_2_67x100.jpg
               3 File(s)              0 bytes
               2 Dir(s)  243,816,271,872 bytes free
3
  • @MethodMan what value should the timestamp have? Sep 4, 2016 at 10:43
  • I figured it out by messing around with the RobbCopy script and creating a goto function inside the bat file.. thanks I am not familiar with powershell as much but if I had to have a timestamp value it would be yyyymmddss with a mask that would have _1 _2 _3 etc... depending on the number of files.. I was able to do this in a batch file using robocopy..
    – MethodMan
    Sep 5, 2016 at 0:19
  • In Windows Powershell, I got a "The term '.Name' is not recognized" error. I was trying to replace blanks with underscores. In the error message, there was a squiggly line (~~~~~) under the second .Name. I then tried simply Get-ChildItem | Foreach-Object {Rename-item $_.Name ($_.Name -replace ' ', '')} and got a "Source and destination path must be different." error. Finally, this worked: Get-ChildItem -File | Foreach-Object {Rename-item $_.Name ($.Name -replace ' ', '_')} I think it was because there were zip files in the folder where I was renaming. Feb 28 at 19:31

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