this post was submitted on 25 Mar 2024
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There's no point in having a CSV for just a single column, just make it a simple text file and it'll simplify the code a bit. So assuming you have a file called
names.txt
, here's a one-liner that can do the trick:As long as the order in your text file matches the order shown by
dir
, you shouldn't have any issues. Maybe do a dry run with a-WhatIf
to theren
first to see how the files are being renamed, before you do the actual rename. :)Also I had someone help with a similar task of duplicating a Word file that is renamed from a list of names found in a csv file. What would be the code when a txt file is used?
That will crash if there is more than one line in individuals.txt, because by the second iteration '.\_2023 Summary Page.docx' has been renamed.
I see. Any suggestions on how to correct it?
Just use Copy-Item instead of Rename-Item if you want multiple identical files with different names
Actually they're all different files.
Then the snippet won't work because it only ever renames/copies the file
'_2023 Summary Page.docx'
. What are the actual names of the files you want to rename?Thanks but I'm getting a 'Cannot create a file when that file already exists.' error. I checked the path so I am certain it is correct.
That means there's a duplicate entry, check the full error message for the file name. You can also use the
-Verbose
switch to see what's going on.It manages to output one file titled 'name; 0++'
Ah, I misplaced a quote in my code, I've update the post - try version.
So it sort of worked in that it outputed a bunch of files with the names but with blank icons and not the Adobe icons. Powershell also had an error for each list item that looked like the following:
Maybe the command needs '.pdf' somewhere?
Well yeah, you need the full name of the file. PowerShell will not automatically asumme the extension of a file.
Also that empty string error means there's a blank line somewhere in your input list, so you'll need to get rid of that.
Just figured it out! Added '.pdf' in the second half of the command.
Thanks for all your help!