I am trying to change all the files names in a current folder and I am trying to achieve this either by removing the files prefix (every file has a common prefix) or changing th
A much simpler solution is provided in
https://superuser.com/a/871799/497147
I copied it here for easier access.
Forget about complicated scripts for this.
rename
is a very old and never properly completed command. If you do not use it properly, the result might surprise you.For example to remove a prefix
abcd
fromabcd1.txt
,abcd2.txt
,abcd3.txt
etc. in order to get1.txt
,2.txt
,3.txt
simply userename "abcd*.txt" "////*.txt"
You need the same number of
/
as the number of initial characters you would like to remove.Do place double quotes for both arguments.
Following is straight way to trim the prefix with rename
for all the files
rename -d your_prefix *
I don't understand why you can't use a batch file. But here is a solution that should work with most file names.
Critical - first you must make sure you have an undefined variable name, I'll use fname
set "fname="
Next is the command to actually do the renaming. It won't work properly if fname is already defined.
for %a in (prefix*.txt) do @(set "fname=%a" & call ren "%fname%" "%fname:*prefix=%")
The fname variable is defined for each iteration and then the syntax %fname:*prefix=%
replaces the first occurrence of "prefix" with nothing. The tricky thing is Windows first attempts to expand %fname% when the command is first parsed. Of course that won't work because it hasn't been defined yet. On the command line the percents are preserved if the variable is not found. The CALL causes an extra expansion phase that occurs after the variable has been set, so the expansion works.
If fname is defined prior to running the command, then it will simply try to rename that same file for each iteration instead of the value that is being assigned within the loop.
If you want to run the command again with a different prefix, you will have to first clear the definition again.
EDIT - Here is a batch file named "RemovePrefix.bat" that does the job
::RemovePrefix.bat prefix fileMask
@echo off
setlocal
for %%A in ("%~1%~2") do (
set "fname=%%~A"
call ren "%%fname%%" "%%fname:*%~1=%%"
)
Suppose you had files named like "prefixName.txt"
, then you would use the script by executing
RemovePrefix "prefix" "*.txt"
The batch file will rename files in your current directory. The batch file will also have to be in your current directory unless the batch file exists in a directory that is in your PATH variable. Or you can specify the full path to the batch file when you call it.
The rules for expansion are different in a batch file. FOR variables must be referenced as %%A instead of %A, and %%fname%% is not expanded initially, instead the double percents are converted into single percents and then %fname% is expanded after the CALL. It doesn't matter if fname is already defined with the batch file. The SETLOCAL makes the definition of fname temporary (local) to the batch file.