stdrename

`stdrename` is a small command line utility to rename all files in a folder according to a specified naming convention (camelCase, snake_case, kebab-case, etc.).


Keywords
utility, rename, camelcase, command-line-tool, hacktoberfest, kebab-case, naming-conventions, rename-files, rename-script, renamer-utility, renaming-directories, snake-case, standardizer
License
CNRI-Python-GPL-Compatible

Documentation

stdrename

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This small utility is designed to rename all files in a folder according to a specified naming convention (camelCase, snake_case, kebab-case, etc.).

It currently supports the following naming conventions:

  • camelCase
  • kebab-case
  • PascalCase
  • SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE
  • Sentence case
  • snake_case
  • Title Case
  • Train-Case

screenshot-of-stdrename

Installation

Manual

Download the latest released file supported by your OS (shared library for Linux and .exe for Windows) and add it to your $PATH.

On Linux you may need to make the shared library file executable with:

chmod +x stdrename

Cargo

Install stdrename using cargo with:

cargo install stdrename

The executable file can then be found in $HOME/.cargo/bin/stdrename.

To make sure $HOME/.cargo/bin is in your $PATH use:

export PATH="$HOME/.cargo/bin:$PATH"

Usage

You must specify the naming convention you want to use with the appropriate flag. For example, this will rename all files in the current directory using the kebab-case naming convention.

stdrename -k

Here is the full list of naming convention flags that can be used:

Short Long Example
-c --camel camelCase.txt
-k --kebab kebab-case.txt
-p --pascal PascalCase.txt
--screaming SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE.txt
-S --sentence Sentence case.txt
-s --snake snake_case.txt
-T --title Title Case.txt
-t --train Train-Case.txt

Specifying a different folder to parse

You can also specify a different folder to parse with a second argument e.g.:

stdrename -k ~/Pictures

Renaming files in subfolders as well

To rename recursively, use the flag -r or --recursive e.g.:

stdrename -kr ~/Pictures

Renaming directories as well

To rename directories as well, use the flag -D or --dir e.g.:

stdrename -kD ~/Pictures

Ignoring files and subdirectories

By default, patterns in .gitignore files, global gitignore files and git exclude files will be ignored as well if the directory is a git repository.

You may also add a .ignore file with patterns to ignore in the file's directory and its subdirectories.

This file may use any of the glob patterns that can be used in a .gitignore file. It is functionally the same, just with a different name e.g.:

Adding the following line in a new .ignore file in the same directory as stdrename will ignore all files with the extension .py and all files in the subdirectory ./target/ when renaming.

# ./.ignore
# ignore all files ending with .py
# ignore all files in /target and its subdirectories

*.py
/target

You may even add a second .ignore file in a subdirectory e.g.:

# ./subdir1/.ignore
# match .py files despite previous instructions
# ignore .txt files in this directory and all subdirectories

!*.py
*.txt

All files in that directory and all sub directories will then reinclude .py files and ignore .txt files.

If you'd like to use global ignore patterns specific to stdrename, you can do so by creating an "ignore" (notice this one does not start with a ".") in the following location:

On Windows: %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\stdrename\"

On Unix based systems (e.g. MacOS or GNU Linux):

$HOME/.config/stdrename/

This file follows the same pattern matching principles as other .gitignore or .ignore files and has a lower precedence than all other sources of ignore rules.

--text mode

Text mode allows for either piping through stdin, e.g.:

echo 'Hello World' | stdrename --text -k

or interactive use, e.g.:

stdrename --text -s
reallyCreativeProgramName.js
really_creative_program_name.js
PYTHONISTA_BANANA.py
pythonista_banana.py
This is really just a normal sentence
this_is_really_just_a_normal_sentence

Either way, the program terminates and stops reading as soon as it encounters an empty line.

To suppress the exit message (if piping stdout to another file for example) add the -q or --quiet flag.

License

FOSSA Status