Looking for a program to rename files

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HaZwaiOh

ILLIEN
ill o.g.
Hey guys!

From day one I started collecting and sampling my old drumsounds which has now added up to a mighty sound library.
Now I want to organize them and by numbering them. Stuff like "BD - 001" or "Snare - 001". If I do it by myself it´s a really awful job. I looked for software on google, but most of the stuff i tried was shit. is there anything you can advice!
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

Cool Edit Pro 2.1 can do it with their batch processor.

Take care,

Nick
 
C

Copenhagen

Guest
Damn, don't tell me that's doable...I spend an ice age renaming all my sounds and stuff...took me close to 3 months on and off. Then I again...I have 40 gigs of sounds...
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

Yes, CEP can do the normalising and envelope editing. You simply record a script, then run the script in batch mode...it's been a feature of the program since the beginning!

I don't have the program in front of me at the moment (I'm writing this from a Mac :D ), but I think you have to go to to Options>Scripts and Batch Processing in the Edit View, then record your script like you would a macro in Word or Excel. Once you've made the script, save it, then run it as a Batch Process from the same window.

You will have options to either overwrite the old files or save them to a new location.

If you have problems, look it up in the manual or help file, it will tell you what to do.

Take care,

Nick
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

You're very welcome. This is just one reason why Cool Edit is the king of audio editors!

Take care,

Nick
 

milLion

buildin'
ill o.g.
hey vitaminman -- how would you generate a script in cool edit pro to keep the same name but append numbers to them for different samples??? -- for example Snare0001, Snare0002,.....Snare000x
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

I'm not sure! I played around a little with CEP tonight trying to figure out how to do that, but no luck. If you write to support@syntrillium.com, they may be able to help you out.

PS: If you're nice, leave your name and write in complete sentences, they'll take you more seriously :D

Take care,

Nick
 
M

mendoza

Guest
Alternatively, you can program a simple script in perl: you read the directory, open your files one by one and do something like:

$filename="file0000";
$filename++;

Then you rename your file with the system call your OS needs.
 
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