Hello,
I want to rename multiple files at a time and I don't know how to do it.
I have various ".mp3" files, like "band name - music name.mp3" and I want to remove the "band name" from all files.
Anybody knows how to do it using shell script or sed or even perl?
Thanks (7 Replies)
I have several hundred files in one directory which I need to move to another directory with the new extension, for example:
/bb/data/rptmgr* are in the source directory need to be moved to
/bb/data55/rptmgr*.new
Is there an efficient way to do it? Thanks -A (4 Replies)
Hi all, I have some files like:
pickup.0000043200.t001.t001.data
pickup.0000043200.t001.t002.data
pickup.0000043200.t002.t001.data
pickup.0000043200.t002.t002.data
pickup.0000043200.t003.t001.data
pickup.0000043200.t003.t002.data
I need to rename these files to
... (4 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I'm very green in Linux.
Please help me to solve my problem.
I have thousands of files and I want to change their names.
They have naming convection: prefix_date_date+1_suffix.nc
prefix: ext-GLORY
date_date+1: 20020101_20020102
and two types of suffix: gridV_R20020130 and... (3 Replies)
Hello!
I am new to this. I have many files from b_ap00 to b_ap80, and I need to move them to folder 00 to 80 respectively, where b_ap00 is in folder 00, b_ap01 is in folder 01.
On top of this, I need to rename the file once they are inside the folder to b_ot, and subsequently run it (ifort -o... (8 Replies)
Hi,
In my directory I have many files, for e.g.
file_123
file_124
file_125
file_126
file_127
Instead of renaming these files one by one, I would like to rename them at a same time using same command... they should appear like
123
124
125
126
127
What command(awk or ls or... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have hundreds of files with XXX in their file name and I want to rename all of them with YYY in place of XXX.
for ex:
$ ls -1
123XXX789
345XXX678
Output
$ ls -1
123YYY789
345YYY678
I know we can loop in each file and sed to replace and rename each file but ren *XXX* *YYY*... (4 Replies)
Hey guys,
I have wrote the following script to apply a module named "trinity" on my files. (it takes two input files and spit a trinity.fasta as output)
#!/bin/bash -l
#SBATCH -p node
#SBATCH -A <projectID>
#SBATCH -n 16
#SBATCH -t 7-00:00:00
#SBATCH --mem=128GB
#SBATCH --mail-type=ALL... (1 Reply)
How to execute multiple files in multiple folders and also output to be generated in the same folder?
Hello Team,
I have a path like Sanity_test/*/* and it has around 100+ folders inside with files. I would like to run/execute those files and output of execution to be placed on same /... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pushpabuzz
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
carp::datum::strip
Datum::Strip(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Datum::Strip(3pm)NAME
Carp::Datum::Strip - strips most Carp::Datum calls lexically
SYNOPSIS
use Carp::Datum::Strip qw(datum_strip);
datum_strip("-", "-");
datum_strip($file, "$file.new", ".bak");
DESCRIPTION
This module exports a single routine, datum_strip(), whose purpose is to remove calls to "Carp::Datum" routines lexically.
Because stripping is done lexically, there are some restrictions about what is actually supported. Unless the conventions documented in
Carp::Datum are followed, stripping will be incorrect.
The general guidelines are:
o Do not use here documents or generalized quotes (qq) within assertion expression or tags. Write assertions using '' or "", as
appropriate.
o Assertions can be safely put on several lines, but must end with a semi-colon, outside any string.
There are two calls that will never be stripped: VERIFY() and DTRACE(). The VERIFY() is meant to be preserved (or "DREQUIRE" would have
been used). "DTRACE", when called, will be remapped dynamically to some "Log::Agent" routine, depending on the trace level. See
Carp::Datum for details.
INTERFACE
The interface of the datum_strip() routine is:
"datum_strip" old_file, new_file, [ext]
The old_file specifies the old file path, the one to be stripped. The stripped version will be written to new_file.
If the optional third argument ext is given (e.g. ".bak"), then old_file will be renamed with the supplied extension, and new_file will
be renamed old_file. Renaming only occurs if stripping was successful (i.e. the new file was correctly written to disk).
The lowest nine "rwx" mode bits from old_file are preserved when creating new_file.
Both old_file and new_file can be set to "-", in which case STDIN and STDOUT are used, respectively, and no renaming can occur, nor any
mode bit propagation.
Returns true on success, "undef" on error.
AUTHORS
Christophe Dehaudt and Raphael Manfredi are the original authors.
Send bug reports, hints, tips, suggestions to Dave Hoover at <squirrel@cpan.org>.
SEE ALSO Carp::Datum(3).
perl v5.10.0 2006-04-13 Datum::Strip(3pm)