Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Renaming a file
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Renaming a file Post 302307574 by VeloLisa on Wednesday 15th of April 2009 07:47:07 PM
Old 04-15-2009
Thanks, CRGrathouse, but I need to do this via an automated Unix shell script. The list of files and the numbers I need to remove will be variable.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Renaming a file to the same name

Hi All, I was wondering if anyone knows how i take in a file, format the file, and then rename the file as the same name as the input file in shell script. Here is an example of what I am doing: if ] then echo "please enter a filename" else export infile=$1 I take in a file... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lachino8
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Renaming a file name

I have an audit log that is produced each day from a production printer. It names the file using todays date, but it removes the leading zero's. For example: todays date 060104 names the file 6104.txt. I ftp this file onto a Sun box and pull stats off of it. To keep some consistency to what I am... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dbrundrett
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help in renaming file !!!

Hi All, I want to rename a file inside a script which has a date portion appended at the start of the file name. The script i wrote works fine when the file comes on a day to day basis but sometimes it comes late too. #!/usr/bin/ksh cd /space/file/source dt=$(date "date "+%m%d%Y")... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumarsaravana_s
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

renaming file

Dear Friends, Need your help once again. I have this file name e.g.1) report_12.rp_1 e.g.2) remark_mm.rmr_3 I want it to be renamed as report_12_1.rp remark_mm_3.rmr (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anushree.a
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Renaming a file use another file as a sequence calling a shl

have this shl that will FTP a file from the a directory in windows to UNIX, It get the name of the file stored in this variable $UpLoadFileName then put in the local directory LocalDir="${MPATH}/xxxxx/dat_files" that part seems to be working, but then I need to take that file and rename, I am using... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rechever
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

File renaming from list of names contained in another file

I have to rename a large number of files so that the name of each file corresponds to a code number that is given side by side in a list (textfile). The list contains in column A the filename of the actual files to be renamed and in column B the name (a client code, 9 digits) that has to be... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: netfreighter
7 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Renaming file

Hello, I have an outstanding issue..Iam on linux and using a putty to connect to my server and then fire our unix shell script. At location /usr/sam a file called "er 1 32.txt" out boss transfer via application. From my end on terminal when i want to transfer this file to some other location... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: j_panky
2 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Need help with Renaming a file

I have a file named as Pro_PatAct_MMDDYYYY.csv. I need to renmae it to this Pro_PatAct.csv without the date timestamp. Can someone help me to achieve this using a regular expn. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: imran_affu
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Renaming File

Hi there, I have 350 files in this directory: /home/adams/29 that was mistakenly renamed in this format: TTFILE_BIT_638478.txt.dat I want to take out the trailing .dat so that it ends in .txt: TTFILE_BIT_638478.txt I need help please. Thank you. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Creems
6 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Renaming file and check for the renamed file existence

Hi Am trying to move a file from one name to another When I do "ls" to check for the moved filename I can see the file but when I try the same with a script am unable.. I think am doing some pretty silly error.. please help.. toMove=`ls | grep -E "partition.+"` mv $toMove partition._org... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Priya Amaresh
7 Replies
Exporter::Renaming(3pm) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Exporter::Renaming(3pm)

NAME
Exporter::Renaming - Allow renaming of symbols on import SYNOPSIS
# Enable renaming in Exporter use Exporter::Renaming; # Import File::Find::find as main::search use File::Find Renaming => [ find => search]; # Disable renaming no Exporter::Renaming ABSTRACT
Allow Renaming of symbols on Import DESCRIPTION
Overview This module adds the ability to rename symbols to the standard Exporter module. After "use Exporter::Renaming", you can import symbols from exporting modules not only under their original names, but also under names of your choosing. Here, symbol is used to mean anything that could be exported by a Module, that is, a Perl function or variable. Thus a symbol begins with an optional type character (one of "$", "@", "%", "&", and "*"), followed by a name (a Perl identifier, made up of alphanumerics and "_", starting with a non-digit). To trigger renaming behavior, the import list of a subsequent "use <module>" statement must begin with the keyword 'Renaming', followed by a list reference, the <renaming list|/Renaming List>, which describes the renaming imports (see below). After that, a normal import list may follow, which Exporter processes as usual. Renaming List The renaming list contains renaming pairs, which are pairs of symbols. The first part of a pair is the original symbol (as known to the exporting module) and the second one is the renamed symbol (as you want to use it after import). It is an error (fatal, as all "Renaming" or "Exporter" errors) if the renaming list has an odd number of elements, or if one of its symbols is invalid. If none of the symbols in a renaming pair contains a type character, an "&" is assumed. If only one has a type character, this type is assumed for the other one too. If both have type characters, it is an error if they don't agree. If the renamed symbol (the second part) of a renaming pair is undefined, the original symbol is imported unchanged, so you can include normal imports in a renaming list without retyping the name. It is an error for a symbol to appear more than once as the second part of a renaming pair, that is, to specify the same thing twice as the target of a renaming operation. It is allowed to import the same symbol multiple times with different targets. Maybe it even makes sense in some situations. Operation Exporter continues to behave normally for normal imports while renaming behavior is switched on. Only the presence of the keyword "Renaming", followed by an array reference in the first and second positions after a "use" statement triggers renaming. The renaming behavior of Exporter is thus compatible with its standard behavior. If renaming must be switched off for some reason, this can be done via "no Export::Renaming". If an import list contains both a renaming list and a sequence of normal import statements, the renaming is done first, as indicated by its position. No cross-check is done between the results of renaming and the normal imports, as if these resulted from two separate "use" statements. EXAMPLES
All examples assume that use Exporter::Renaming; has been called (and that "no Exporter::Renaming" hasn't). The most obvious application of "Exporter::Renaming" is to solve a name conflict. Suppose our module already defines a function "find", and we want to use the standard "File::Find" module. We could then rename "find" from "File::Find" to "search" in our own module: use File::Find Renaming => [ find => 'search' ]; Let's assume the "finddepth" function from File::Find doesn't cause a name conflict, and we want to import it under its original name as well. This does it in the renaming list: use File::Find Renaming => [ find => 'search', finddepth => undef, ]; ...as does this, but explicitly: use File::Find Renaming => [ find => 'search', finddepth => 'finddepth', ]; ...while this uses a regular import: use File::Find Renaming => [ find => 'search' ], 'finddepth'; Should you find it annoying that a pedantic module author has chosen to adorn all of the module's exports with a redundant prefix (these things happen), you could do this: use Mythical::Graphics::Module Renaming => [ gfxColor => '%color', # this imports a hash gfxPen => 'pen', gfxLine => 'line', # .... # etc ]; ...lower-casing the names as well. If you need to add clarifying prefixes that a sloppy module author has neglected to provide in the exports (these things happen), you go the other way around: use Legendary::Graphics::Module Renaming [ Color => '%gfxColor', Pen => 'gfxPen', Line => 'gfxLine', # ... # etc ]; ...also lower-casing the initial letters. If you are confronted with a standard module that uses a slightly non-standard naming convention (it happens), you can rectify the situation: use Data::Dumper Renaming => [ Dumper => 'dump' ]; Now you can say "print dump %some_hash" instead of "print Dumper ..."; CAVEATS
o As has been mentioned in section Operation, no cross-check is done between renaming exports and normal exports that go on in the same "use" statement. This means that a renaming import may later be overwritten by a normal import without a clear indication. This happens when one of the new names given in renaming coincides with one of the original ones imported through normal import. o "Exporter::Renaming" only affects modules that do standard exporting, that is, modules that inherit their "import" method from Exporter. Modules that use a different "import" method are unaffected and don't understand renaming lists. o Renaming doesn't affect the name c<caller> sees for a function. This should come as no surprise, since normal export doesn't affect this name either. It is always the (package-qualified) name the function was originally compiled with. BUGS
o The lack of a cross-check between renaming and normal imports is regrettable, but unlikely to be fixed unless Renaming is made part of Exporter. Except for the simplest cases, only Exporter can parse an export list. o Calls of "use Exporter::Renaming" and "no Exporter::Renaming" don't nest. Instead of switching unconditionally, "no Renaming" should only switch off the behavior if it was off in the corresponding call to "use Exporter::Renaming". A future release may address this. SEE ALSO
Exporter, Perl AUTHOR
Anno Siegel, <siegel@zrz.tu-berlin.de> ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Avi Finkel (avi@finkel.org) and Simon Cozens (simon@simon-cozens.org) for a discussion of this project on IRC. While brief, their remarks helped me think about things the right way. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2003 by Anno Siegel This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-04-23 Exporter::Renaming(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:12 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy