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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting removing the filename extension Post 302501486 by alister on Thursday 3rd of March 2011 04:43:35 PM
Old 03-03-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by in2nix4life
for x in *;do mv $x $(echo ${x%*.*});done
There's no need for the echo command substitution and the first asterisk in your parameter substitution is meaningless since it's a shortest match (% instead of %%). Also, the filenames in question have spaces (perhaps that info was added after you had read the post), so the expansions need to be double quoted to protect them from field splitting.

A slightly simpler version of your approach:
Code:
for x in *; do
    mv "$x" "${x%.*}"
done

---------- Post updated at 04:43 PM ---------- Previous update was at 04:40 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by daflore
Is there an easy way to strip off a filename's extension?
...<snip>...
Thanks. I have a directory full of filenames that need to be manipulated in this way.
If it's possible that striping the file extension from file1 can match an existing file, file2, and if you don't want file2 clobbered, you'll want to test for the existence of file2 before doing the mv.

Regards,
Alister
 

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COMBINE(1)																COMBINE(1)

NAME
combine - combine sets of lines from two files using boolean operations SYNOPSIS
combine file1 and file2 combine file1 not file2 combine file1 or file2 combine file1 xor file2 _ file1 and file2 _ _ file1 not file2 _ _ file1 or file2 _ _ file1 xor file2 _ DESCRIPTION
combine combines the lines in two files. Depending on the boolean operation specified, the contents will be combined in different ways: and Outputs lines that are in file1 if they are also present in file2. not Outputs lines that are in file1 but not in file2. or Outputs lines that are in file1 or file2. xor Outputs lines that are in either file1 or file2, but not in both files. "-" can be specified for either file to read stdin for that file. The input files need not be sorted, and the lines are output in the order they occur in file1 (followed by the order they occur in file2 for the two "or" operations). Bear in mind that this means that the operations are not commutative; "a and b" will not necessarily be the same as "b and a". To obtain commutative behavior sort and uniq the result. Note that this program can be installed as "_" to allow for the syntactic sugar shown in the latter half of the synopsis (similar to the test/[ command). It is not currently installed as "_" by default, but you can alias it to that if you like. SEE ALSO
join(1) AUTHOR
Copyright 2006 by Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net> Licensed under the GNU GPL. moreutils 2012-04-09 COMBINE(1)
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