January 13, 2011

How to remove spaces from filenames

I often run into files with spaces in them and I want to rename them. Once again, there's a command that's appropriately named to do the job. I'm going to go over how to use the rename command. Let's take a look at the files we're going to work with.

mike@shiner $ ls
foo bar.txt  test this.txt

We have two files which are named 'foo bar.txt' and 'test this.txt'. We're going to use the following command to get rid of the spaces.

mike@shiner $ rename 's/ /_/' *.txt

The command takes two arguments. The first argument is a regular expression where the 's' stands for substitute. The contents between the first set of slashes represent what we're matching on. The '_' between the second set of slashes represent what we want to replace it with. The second argument, *.txt, tells rename what files will be affected. The preceding command happily renders the following result.

mike@shiner $ ls
foo_bar.txt  test_this.txt

Now let's say we want to replace the underscores with dashes. We can do this with the following command.

mike@shiner $ rename 's/_/-/' *.txt
mike@shiner $ ls
foo-bar.txt  test-this.txt

1 comment:

  1. You can use the following command to add '.txt' to a bunch of files that have names that start with 'test'.


    rename 's/$/.txt/' test*

    ReplyDelete