Reputation: 937
I want add the date next to a filename ("somefile.txt"). For example: somefile_25-11-2009.txt or somefile_25Nov2009.txt or anything to that effect
Maybe a script will do or some command in the terminal window. I'm using Linux(Ubuntu).
The script or command should update the filename to a new date everytime you want to save the file into a specific folder but still keeping the previous files. So there would be files like this in the folder eventually: filename_18Oct2009.txt , filename_9Nov2009.txt , filename_23Nov2009.txt
Upvotes: 82
Views: 231938
Reputation: 188004
Info/Summary
With bash scripting you can enclose commands in back ticks or parantheses. This works great for labling files, the following wil create a file name with the date appended to it.
Methods
Backticks -
$ echo myfilename-"`date +"%d-%m-%Y"`"
$(parantheses) -
:
$ echo myfilename-$(date +"%d-%m-%Y")
Example Usage:
echo "Hello World" > "/tmp/hello-$(date +"%d-%m-%Y").txt"
(creates text file '/tmp/hello-28-09-2022.txt' with text inside of it)
Note, in Linux quotes are your friend, best practice to enclose the file name to prevent issues with spaces and such in variables.
Upvotes: 117
Reputation: 3355
You can add date next to a filename invoking date
command in subshell.
date
command with required formatting options invoked the braces of $()
or between the backticks (`…`
) is executed in a subshell and the output is then placed in the original command.
The $(...)
is more preferred since in can be nested. So you can use command substitution inside another substitution.
Solutions for requests in questions
$ echo somefile_$(date +%d-%m-%Y).txt
somefile_28-10-2021.txt
$ echo somefile_$(date +%d%b%Y).txt
somefile_28Oct2021.txt
The date
command comes with many formatting options that allow you to customize the date output according to the requirement.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 101
I use it in raspberry pi, and the first answer doesn't work for me, maybe because I typed wrong or something? I don't know. So I combined the above answers and came up with this:
now=$(date +'%Y-%m-%d')
geany "OptionalName-${now}.txt"
That if you want to use geany or anything else
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 236
I use this script in bash:
#!/bin/bash
now=$(date +"%b%d-%Y-%H%M%S")
FILE="$1"
name="${FILE%.*}"
ext="${FILE##*.}"
cp -v $FILE $name-$now.$ext
This script copies filename.ext to filename-date.ext, there is another that moves filename.ext to filename-date.ext, you can download them from here. Hope you find them useful!!
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 193686
There's two problems here.
1. Get the date as a string
This is pretty easy. Just use the date
command with the +
option. We can use backticks to capture the value in a variable.
$ DATE=`date +%d-%m-%y`
You can change the date format by using different %
options as detailed on the date man page.
2. Split a file into name and extension.
This is a bit trickier. If we think they'll be only one .
in the filename we can use cut
with .
as the delimiter.
$ NAME=`echo $FILE | cut -d. -f1
$ EXT=`echo $FILE | cut -d. -f2`
However, this won't work with multiple .
in the file name. If we're using bash
- which you probably are - we can use some bash magic that allows us to match patterns when we do variable expansion:
$ NAME=${FILE%.*}
$ EXT=${FILE#*.}
Putting them together we get:
$ FILE=somefile.txt
$ NAME=${FILE%.*}
$ EXT=${FILE#*.}
$ DATE=`date +%d-%m-%y`
$ NEWFILE=${NAME}_${DATE}.${EXT}
$ echo $NEWFILE
somefile_25-11-09.txt
And if we're less worried about readability we do all the work on one line (with a different date format):
$ FILE=somefile.txt
$ FILE=${FILE%.*}_`date +%d%b%y`.${FILE#*.}
$ echo $FILE
somefile_25Nov09.txt
Upvotes: 53
Reputation: 6476
a bit more convoluted solution that fully matches your spec
echo `expr $FILENAME : '\(.*\)\.[^.]*'`_`date +%d-%m-%y`.`expr $FILENAME : '.*\.\([^.]*\)'`
where first 'expr' extracts file name without extension, second 'expr' extracts extension
Upvotes: 0