Mithun Sreedharan
Mithun Sreedharan

Reputation: 51272

Linux - Replacing spaces in the file names

I have a number of files in a folder, and I want to replace every space character in all file names with underscores. How can I achieve this?

Upvotes: 130

Views: 108075

Answers (11)

Katu
Katu

Reputation: 1564

This will replace ' ' with '_' in every folder and file name recursivelly in Linux with Python >= 3.5. Change path_to_your_folder with your path.

Only list files and folders:

python -c "import glob;[print(x) for x in glob.glob('path_to_your_folder/**', recursive=True)]"

Replace ' ' with '_' in every folder and file name

python -c "import os;import glob;[os.rename(x,x.replace(' ','_')) for x in glob.glob('path_to_your_folder/**', recursive=True)]"

With Python < 3.5, you can install glob2

pip install glob2
python -c "import os;import glob2;[os.rename(x,x.replace(' ','_')) for x in glob2.glob('path_to_your_folder/**')]"

Upvotes: 0

javipas
javipas

Reputation: 281

What if you want to apply the replace task recursively? How would you do that?

Well, I just found the answer myself. Not the most elegant solution, (also tries to rename files that do not comply with the condition) but it works. (BTW, in my case I needed to rename the files with '%20', not with an underscore)

#!/bin/bash
find . -type d | while read N
do
     (
           cd "$N"
           if test "$?" = "0"
           then
               for file in *; do mv "$file" ${file// /%20}; done
           fi
     )
done

Upvotes: 6

yoogottamk
yoogottamk

Reputation: 69

Here is another solution:

ls | awk '{printf("\"%s\"\n", $0)}' | sed 'p; s/\ /_/g' | xargs -n2 mv
  1. uses awk to add quotes around the name of the file
  2. uses sed to replace space with underscores; prints the original name with quotes(from awk); then the substituted name
  3. xargs takes 2 lines at a time and passes it to mv

Upvotes: 5

akilesh raj
akilesh raj

Reputation: 674

To rename all the files with a .py extension use, find . -iname "*.py" -type f | xargs -I% rename "s/ /_/g" "%"

Sample output,

$ find . -iname "*.py" -type f                                                     
./Sample File.py
./Sample/Sample File.py
$ find . -iname "*.py" -type f | xargs -I% rename "s/ /_/g" "%"
$ find . -iname "*.py" -type f                                                     
./Sample/Sample_File.py
./Sample_File.py

Upvotes: 1

Desta Haileselassie Hagos
Desta Haileselassie Hagos

Reputation: 26086

The easiest way to replace a string (space character in your case) with another string in Linux is using sed. You can do it as follows

sed -i 's/\s/_/g' *

Hope this helps.

Upvotes: -1

Amir Afghani
Amir Afghani

Reputation: 38531

Try something like this, assuming all of your files were .txt's:

for files in *.txt; do mv “$files” `echo $files | tr ‘ ‘ ‘_’`; done

Upvotes: 2

ghostdog74
ghostdog74

Reputation: 342363

Quote your variables:

for file in *; do echo mv "'$file'" "${file// /_}"; done

Remove the "echo" to do the actual rename.

Upvotes: 1

neesh
neesh

Reputation: 5265

This should do it:

for file in *; do mv "$file" `echo $file | tr ' ' '_'` ; done

Upvotes: 224

DF.
DF.

Reputation: 991

I prefer to use the command 'rename', which takes Perl-style regexes:

rename "s/ /_/g" *

You can do a dry run with the -n flag:

rename -n "s/ /_/g" *

Upvotes: 96

Murali VP
Murali VP

Reputation: 6417

If you use bash:

for file in *; do mv "$file" ${file// /_}; done

Upvotes: 5

DigitalRoss
DigitalRoss

Reputation: 146053

Use sh...

for i in *' '*; do   mv "$i" `echo $i | sed -e 's/ /_/g'`; done

If you want to try this out before pulling the trigger just change mv to echo mv.

Upvotes: 20

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