nvm/rename_test.sh

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#! /usr/bin/env bash
find_name(){
find test -name "*[\\/:\*\?\"<>\|]*" -o -name "*."
}
check_name() {
if [ "$(find_name | wc -l)" != "0" ]; then
printf '%s\n\n' "The following filenames contain unwanted characters:"
find_name
printf '\n%s\n%s\n' "Please run ./rename_test.sh" "If the problem persist, please open an issue."
exit 1
else
echo "Ok"
fi
}
rename_test() {
local filename
local new_filename
while read -r filename; do
# Even though it looks < and > are replaced by the same < and >, the latters are not ASCII code
# If you check with 'cat -v rename_test.sh' you would see 's/</M-KM-^B/g' and 's/>/M-KM-^C/g'
# M-KM-^B -> U+02C2
# M-KM-^C -> U+02C3
new_filename=$(echo "$filename" | sed -r \
-e "s/\"/'/g" \
-e 's/</˂/g' \
-e 's/>/˃/g' \
-e 's/^(.*)\.$/\1/'
)
printf '%s\n%s\n\n' "$filename" "$new_filename"
[ "$filename" != "$new_filename" ] && git mv "$filename" "$new_filename"
done < <(find_name)
if [ "$(find_name | wc -l)" != "0" ]; then
echo "Still some files to treat:"
find_name
else
echo "Done"
fi
}
main() {
if [ "$1" = "--check" ]; then
check_name
else
rename_test
fi
}
main "$@"