\s does match any white space and is very different than /s. In my
example this is what everything means
rename 's/:/-/' * 0 12345678 9
0 - name of program
1 - the following should be interpreted literally by the shell
2 - we are going to do a regular expression search and replace
3 - Regular expression start character (you can actually change this to
any character you like in your regular expression is going to contain
slashes (/), but stick with / to begin with.
4 - The search pattern that will be searching for, in this case a colon
5 - the seperator beween the search and replace
6 - the pattern that we will be replacing our search matched with, in
this case a -
7 - the end our of regular expression
8 - stop interpreting everything literally
There are options that you can add after the last / that can make your
regular expression case insensitive (i) or make it work more than once
on the same line (g)...etc.etc.. but there aren't any in this case as
they aren't needed.
9 - this star is now shell globing and makes the command operate on all
the files in the current directory. In your case it would probably be
better to do *:* so that it only touches files with a : in their names,
so that you limit the damage if you get something wrong.
I'm sure that's now as clear as mud. :)
Brian Cluff
On 01/30/2016 12:26 PM, Michael wrote:
> you know... the reason I was doubting that page is because it says
> that \s matches any white space and in the example that worked:
>
> rename 's/:/-/' *
>
> looks to me as if it is saying to search for a blank space followed by
> a colon and then (i guess) the next forward slash tells it to replace
> it with a dash. Then the final '\' closes the statement and that too
> is a tatement surrounded by apostrapheses.
> Is that right?
>
> On Sat, Jan 30, 2016 at 2:09 PM, Brian Cluff <brian@snaptek.com
> <mailto:brian@snaptek.com>> wrote:
>
> Regular expressions is a pretty big topic. It's not super easy
> like globing (like the * you've been using in bash) which you can
> get the idea from the 544 page book (
> http://www.amazon.com/Mastering-Regular-Expressions-Jeffrey-Friedl/dp/0596528124/
> ) that can be bought on regular expressions. The equivalent book
> on globing would be a pamphlet.
>
> That being said, the basics aren't too hard to learn, but you have
> to keep in mind that they are fairly different, and don't always
> act like what you would think.
>
> There are a ton of howtos out there and they take a lot of
> different approaches to explaining thing, I would just search
> google for them until you find one that speaks to you.
>
> Brian Cluff
>
>
> On 01/30/2016 11:54 AM, Michael wrote:
>> thank you Brian. Does anyone happen to know of a perl regexr
>> list. I found one but am not sure if it is right:
>> http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/perl/regexp.html
>> <http://www.cs.tut.fi/%7Ejkorpela/perl/regexp.html>
>>
>> On Sat, Jan 30, 2016 at 11:43 AM, Brian Cluff <brian@snaptek.com
>> <mailto:brian@snaptek.com>> wrote:
>>
>> You can't rename files that way. The * on the command line
>> gets turned into real file names by bash before they are ever
>> given to the mv command so you are tell the command line to
>> consist of any files with a : followed by any files with an =
>> or -.
>> At best your command will error out, at worst it will
>> overwrite an existing file.
>> What you are needing is a program that can take a pattern and
>> rename files with a different pattern. There are 2 that I've
>> used, mmv and rename. Of the 2, you probably have rename on
>> your system already since it gets pulled in with PERL. If
>> not, just install the rename package.
>>
>> With rename all you have to do is:
>> rename 's/:/-/' *
>>
>> That will use a regular expression to change all the files in
>> the current directory that contain a : in their name to the
>> same name with a - replacing the :.
>>
>> Be very very careful with the rename command, it can and will
>> clobber every file that it touches before you know it just
>> because you got a single character out of place.
>> When in doubt add the -n option so that it will tell you what
>> it's going to do without actually doing it. Then if
>> everything looks good, run the command again without the -n
>> to actually make the changes.
>>
>> Brian Cluff
>>
>>
>>
>> On 01/30/2016 08:29 AM, Michael wrote:
>>> I'm sure that will fix it but what am I doing wrong in my
>>> attempts to rename them?
>>>
>>> $ mv *:* *=*
>>> mv: target ‘*=*’ is not a directory
>>> $ mv *:* *-*
>>> mv: target ‘darktable-1:9Download’ is not a directory
>>> $ mv *:* ./*-*
>>> mv: target ‘./darktable-1:9Download’ is not a directory
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sat, Jan 30, 2016 at 10:29 AM, Matt Graham
>>> <mhgraham@crow202.org <mailto:mhgraham@crow202.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>> On Fri, Jan 29, 2016 at 6:45 PM, Michael
>>> <bmike1@gmail.com <mailto:bmike1@gmail.com>> wrote:
>>>
>>> the filesystem is probably FAT because it is a thumb
>>> drive....
>>> rsync: mkstemp
>>> "/media/bmike1/RedSanDisk/Documents/Education/Darktable/.darktable-1:10WaterLilyEdit.CccL3o"
>>> failed: Invalid argument (22)
>>>
>>>
>>> It is not possible to have a ':' character in a filename
>>> on a FAT-based filesystem. This is because that
>>> character was used to denote which disk drive a file was
>>> on back in the DOS days... "C:\junk\stuff.txt" and so forth.
>>>
>>> I am not sure what these hidden files contain, or
>>> whether they're actually important. You can pass the
>>> "--exclude *\:*" option to rsync to tell it to not try
>>> to transfer files that contain ':' characters, which may
>>> help.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Crow202 Blog: http://crow202.org/wordpress
>>> There is no Darkness in Eternity
>>> But only Light too dim for us to see.
>>>
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