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renamer
Renamer is a command-line utility to help rename files and folders. It is flexible and extensible via plugins.
Disclaimer
Always run this tool with the --dry-run
option until you are confident the results look correct.
Synopsis
The examples below use double quotes to suit Windows users. MacOS & Linux users should use single quotes.
As input, renamer takes a list of filenames or glob patterns plus some options describing how you would like the files to be renamed.
$ renamer [options] [file...]
This trivial example will replace the text jpeg
with jpg
in all file and directory names in the current directory.
$ renamer --find jpeg --replace jpg *
As above but operates on all files and folders recursively.
$ renamer --find jpeg --replace jpg "**"
Fine-tune which files to process
If no filenames or patterns are specified, renamer will look for a newline-separated list of filenames on standard input. This approach is useful for crafting a specific input list using tools like find
. This example operates on files modified less than 20 minutes ago.
$ find . -mtime -20m | renamer --find jpeg --replace jpg
Same again but with a hand-rolled input of filenames and glob patterns. Create an input text file, e.g. files.txt
:
house.jpeg
garden.jpeg
img/*
Then pipe it into renamer.
$ cat files.txt | renamer --find jpeg --replace jpg
Rename using regular expressions
Simple example using a regular expression literal. The case-insensitive pattern /one/i
matches the input file ONE.jpg
, renaming it to two.jpg
.
$ renamer --find "/one/i" --replace "two" ONE.jpg
Rename using JavaScript
For more complex renames, or if you just prefer using code, you can write a replace function. Create a module exporting a class which defines a replace
method. This trivial example appends the text [DONE]
to each file name.
import path from 'path'
class Suffix {
replace (filePath) {
const file = path.parse(filePath)
const newName = file.name + ' [DONE]' + file.ext
return path.join(file.dir, newName)
}
}
export default Suffix
Process all files in the current directory using your plugin as the replace chain.
$ renamer --dry-run --chain suffix.mjs *
Dry run
✔︎ pic1.jpg → pic1 [DONE].jpg
✔︎ pic2.jpg → pic2 [DONE].jpg
Rename complete: 2 of 6 files renamed.
Views
The following gif demonstrates the default view (with and without --verbose
mode), the built-in alternative views (long
, diff
and one-line
) and a custom view.
Further reading
Please see the wiki for
For more information on Regular Expressions, see this useful guide.
Install
First, ensure Node.js v14 or above is installed.
To install renamer globally as a part of your regular command-line tool kit:
$ npm install --global renamer
To install renamer as a development dependency of your project:
$ npm install --save-dev renamer
© 2012-21 Lloyd Brookes <75pound@gmail.com>.
Tested by test-runner.