This Python script adds, removes, and manages date- and time-stamps in file names.
2013-05-09 a file name with ISO date stamp in name -- tag1.jpg
2013-05-09T16.17 file name with time stamp -- tag3.csv
Usage: date2name [options] file ...
Per default, date2name gets the modification time of matching files and directories and adds a datestamp in standard ISO 8601+ format YYYY-MM-DD (http://datestamps.org/index.shtml) at the beginning of the file- or directoryname. If an existing timestamp is found, its style will be converted to the selected ISO datestamp format but the numbers stays the same. Executed with an examplefilename "file" this results e.g. in "2008-12-31_file". Note: Other that defined in ISO 8601+ the delimiter between hours, minutes, and seconds is not a colon but a dot. Colons are causing several problems on different file systems and are there fore replaced with the (older) DIN 5008 version with dots.
Run date2name --help for usage hints
Options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -d, --directories modify only directory names -f, --files modify only file names -C, --compact use compact datestamp (YYYYMMDD) -M, --month use datestamp with year and month (YYYY-MM) -w, --withtime use datestamp including seconds (YYYY-MM-DDThh.mm.ss) -m, --mtime take modification time for datestamp [default] -c, --ctime take creation time for datestamp --delimiter overwrite delimiter string --nocorrections do not convert existing datestamps to new format -q, --quiet do not output anything but just errors on console -v, --verbose enable verbose mode -s, --dryrun enable dryrun mode: just simulate what would happen, do not modify files or directories --version display version and exit
Please read https://github.com/novoid/date2name/ for further information and descriptions.
Version | Tag | Published |
---|---|---|
2021.11.25.2 | 1yr ago | |
2021.11.25.1 | 1yr ago | |
2018.05.09.1 | 5yrs ago | |
2018.02.03.1 | 5yrs ago |