| .gitignore | ||
| appendfilename.py | ||
| license.txt | ||
| README.org | ||
## Time-stamp: <2013-05-16 19:05:51 vk> ## -- coding: utf-8 -- ## This file is best viewed with GNU Emacs Org-mode: http://orgmode.org/
appendfilename.py
This Python script adds a string to a file name. The string gets added between the original file name and its extension.
In case the file name contains tags as handled as with filetag, the string gets added right before the separator between file name and tags.
Examples for adding the string "foo bar":
| old file name | new file name |
|---|---|
| a simple file.txt | a simple file foo bar.txt |
| 2013-05-09T16.17_img_00042.jpeg | 2013-05-09T16.17_img_00042 foo bar.jpeg |
| 2013-05-09T16.17_img_00042 – fun.jpeg | 2013-05-09T16.17_img_00042 foo bar – fun.jpeg |
- Target group: users who are able to use command line tools and who are using tags in file names.
- Hosted on github: https://github.com/novoid/appendfilename
Why
Besides the fact that I am using ISO dates and times in file names (as shown in examples above), I am using tags with file names. To separate tags from the file name, I am using the separator ~ – ~ (space dash dash space).
For people familiar with Regular Expressions:
(<ISO date/time stamp>)? <descriptive file name> -- <list of tags separated by spaces>.extension
For tagging, please refer to filetag and its documentation.
If I want to add a descriptive file name to files like ,e.g., photographs, I have to rename the original file and insert the description at the right spot of the existing file name.
This is not an error-prone task. If I am not careful, I can overwrite parts of the old file name I wanted to keep. Or I could mess up spacing between the old file name, tags, and the new description.
Therefore, I wrote this script that adds a description to the file name without removing old file name parts or tags.
You may like to add this tool to your image or file manager of choice. I added mine to geeqie which is my favorite image viewer on GNU/Linux.
Usage
appendfilename.py --text foo a_file_name.txt
… adds "foo" such that it results in a_file_name foo.txt
appendfilename.py a_file_name.txt
… (implicit) interactive mode: asking for the string to add from the user
appendfilename.py --text "foo bar" "file name 1.jpg" "file name 2 -- foo.txt" "file name 3 -- bar.csv"
… adds tag "foo" such that it results in …
"file name 1 foo bar.jpg" "file name 2 foo bar -- foo.txt" "file name 3 foo bar -- bar.csv"
For a complete list of parameters, please try:
appendfilename.py --help
Bonus: integrating into Geeqie (or similar file browsers)
I am using geeqie for browsing/presenting image files. For quickly
adding descriptive text to image file(s), I mapped this script to
r. This way, I can go through my image files very quickly and do not
have to worry about placing cursor in the rename dialog of geeqie.
Using GNU/Linux, this is quite easy accomplished. The only thing that is not straight forward is the need for a wrapper script. The wrapper script does provide a shell window for entering the tags.
vk-appendfilename-interactive-wrapper-with-gnome-terminal.sh looks like:
#!/bin/sh
/usr/bin/gnome-terminal \
--geometry=157x56+330+5 \
--tab-with-profile=big \
--hide-menubar \
-x /home/vk/src/appendfilename/appendfilename.py "${@}"
#end
In $HOME/.config/geeqie/applications I wrote a desktop file such
that geeqie shows the wrapper script as external editor to its
image files:
$HOME/.config/geeqie/applications/appendfilename.desktop looks like:
[Desktop Entry] Name=appendfilename GenericName=appendfilename Comment= Exec=/home/vk/src/misc/vk-appendfilename-interactive-wrapper-with-gnome-terminal.sh %F Icon= Terminal=true Type=Application Categories=Application;Graphics; hidden=false MimeType=image/*;video/*;image/mpo;image/thm Categories=X-Geeqie;
In order to be able to use the keyboard shortcuts r, you can define
them in geeqie:
- Edit > Preferences > Preferences … > Keyboard.
- Scroll to the bottom of the list.
- Double click in the
KEY-column ofappendfilenameand choose your desired keyboard shortcut accordingly.
I hope this method is as handy for you as it is for me :-)
Contribute!
I am looking for your ideas!
If you want to contribute to this cool project, please fork and contribute!