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There is 1 alternative - vote for the best!
That is an alternative to command 8368.
Command 8368 is EXTREMELY NOT clever.
1) Will break also for files with spaces AND new lines in them AND for an empty expansion of the glob '*'
2) For making such a simple task it uses two pipes, thus forking.
3) xargs(1) is dangerous (broken) when processing filenames that are not NUL-terminated.
4) ls shows you a representation of files. They are NOT file names (for simple names, they mostly happen to be equivalent). Do NOT try to parse it.
Why? see this :http://mywiki.wooledge.org/ParsingLs
Recursive version:
find . -depth -name "*foo*" -exec bash -c 'for f; do base=${f##*/}; mv -- "$f" "${f%/*}/${base//foo/bar}"; done' _ {} +
Renames all files in a directory named foo to bar.
foobar1 gets renamed to barbar1
barfoo2 gets renamed to barbar2
fooobarfoo gets renamed to barobarfoo
NOTE: Will break for files with spaces AND new lines AND for an empty expansion of the glob '*'
Would this command line achieve the desired function? My CLI knowledge is not great so this could certainly be wrong. It is merely a suggestion for more experienced uses to critique. Best wishes roly :-)
without sed, but has no problems with files with spaces or other critical characters
If you can do better, submit your command here.
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