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# Put this function to your .bashrc file. | |
# Usage: mv oldfilename | |
# If you call mv without the second parameter it will prompt you to edit the filename on command line. | |
# Original mv is called when it's called with more than one argument. | |
# It's useful when you want to change just a few letters in a long name. | |
# | |
# Also see: | |
# - imv from renameutils | |
# - Ctrl-W Ctrl-Y Ctrl-Y (cut last word, paste, paste) | |
function mv() { | |
if [ "$#" -ne 1 ] || [ ! -e "$1" ]; then | |
command mv "$@" | |
return | |
fi | |
read -ei "$1" newfilename | |
command mv -v -- "$1" "$newfilename" | |
} |
You can also do Ctrl-W followed by Ctrl-Y after typing the path, if you are using readline style keybindings. Mainstream shells come with readline style bindings by default.
Ctrl-W deletes the previous word for me
In zsh you need compdef mv=ls
, it seems, or the completion breaks.
@premek your snippet is great, short, concise and to the point. Thanks for sharing it.
There are even more flexible ways (in bash, at least), for example (here renaming .txt to .json):
$ touch config.txt $ mv config.txt !#:1:s/txt/json
This one eludes me, care to explain how it works?
I would recommend adding --interactive to the mv commands in the script. As it is now, it is possible to overwrite existing files with no confirmation using this script.
With the
fish
shell, you can typeAlt-E
to edit any command line in your favorite editor where you likely already know shortcuts for copying, pasting and modifying. The great thing is that is a general solution that works for any command line edits.
In bash it is C-x C-e
I like it, it's especially useful if you have spaces in the file (or directory) name (btw the bash cut last word would not work then). Probably I would also flip the conditional and add directory checking: