![]() ![]() Is there a way to run an action that can accomplish this?Īny help would be great- I've tried figuring it out myself, to no avail. I now have a folder full of pdf's labeled generically "filename #.pdf" (ex: Cola-Brands 1.pdf, Cola-Brands 2.pdf, Cola-Brands 3.pdf)Īs each page has a unique advertiser logo, and I want to re-name each file specific to that advertiser (ex: if the Coke logo is on page 1, the Pepsi logo on page 2, Sprite logo on page 3, I want the pdf for page 1 renamed to "Coke.pdf", page 2 "Pepsi.pdf", page 3 "Sprite.pdf", etc). ![]() So, I've created a multi-page PDF in InDeign, exported it, ran an action with (Acrobat's) Action Wizard to split the multi-page PDF into individual files. In an attempt to help clearly explain what I am asking for, lets say I have built a multi-page file for Cola advertisers, and have split it into multiple pages, and now wish for those pages to be specifically renamed without doing it manually. I know the pages can have suffixes added before or after parts of a file name, but, this does not help me- I need to find a way to run an action that specifically re-names pages in a sort of "Find and replace" manner, or, page #="specific".īasically, I have 51 pdf's labeled 1-51 that I want to re-name specific to that page's advertiser. if you copy the above command and now want to use it to change the extension of '.xml' files) is no longer required in two places.In an attempt to streamline workflow, I am trying to batch rename multiple PDF's using an action that would re-name the file based on it's page number. filename: bulkfilerename.ps1 by: subcan PowerShell script to rename multiple files within a folder to a name that increments without () create counter. That is, there is no need to filter before the pipe if our regex sufficiently filters after the pipe. Step 3: Select all the files you want to rename. Type dir and press Enter to see a list of files. Here is our MUO Batch Rename test folder from the previous sections, now open in PowerShell. Step 2: Click on the View tab and select Details. Head to the folder containing the files you want to batch rename, hit Shift + Right Click, then Open a PowerShell window here. From example 4 in the help documentation of Rename-Item retrieved with the command: get-help Rename-Item -examplesĮxample: Get-ChildItem *.txt| Rename-Item -NewName Step 1: Open File Explorer and navigate to the files and folders you want to rename. ![]()
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