Johy
Johy

Reputation: 317

Linux cp with a regexp

I would like to copy some files in a directory, renaming the files but conserving extension. Is this possible with a simple cp, using regex ?

For example :

cp ^myfile\.(.*) mydir/newname.$1

So I could copy the file conserving the extension but renaming it. Is there a way to get matched elements in the cp regex to use it in the command ? If not, I'll do a perl script I think, or if you have another way...

Thanks

Upvotes: 5

Views: 15721

Answers (3)

Jeff Ward
Jeff Ward

Reputation: 19126

I really like the regex syntax of the rename perl script (by Robin Barker and Larry Wall), e.g.:

rename "s/OldFile/NewFile/" OldFile*

OldFile.c and OldFile.h are renamed to NewFile.c and NewFile.h, respectively

I simply wanted the exact same thing with a copy command:

copy "s/OldFile/NewFile/" OldFile*

So I duplicated that script and changed the rename statement to copy via File::Copy. Et voila! A copy command with perl-regex syntax:

https://gist.github.com/jcward/0ead33bd79f2061c68728cc82582241f

Upvotes: 1

Kerrek SB
Kerrek SB

Reputation: 477368

Suppose you have myfile.a, myfile.b, myfile.c:

for i in myfile.*; do echo mv "$i" "${i/myfile./newname.}"; done

This creates (upon removal of echo) newname.a, newname.b, newname.c.

Upvotes: 15

hmakholm left over Monica
hmakholm left over Monica

Reputation: 23342

The shell doesn't understand general regexes; you'll have to outsource to auxiliary programs for that. The classical scripty way to solve your task would be something like

for a in myfile.* ; do
  b=`echo $a | sed 's!^myfile!mydir/newname!'`
  cp $a $b
done

Or have a perl script generate a list of commands that you then source into the shell.

Upvotes: 1

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