On 18/03/11 16:21, Bob Goodwin wrote: > On 18/03/11 16:00, Joe Zeff wrote: >> On 03/18/2011 12:43 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote: >>> Perhaps someone can put me on the right track. I will provide >>> more details if required. >> Try installing and using pyRenamer. (I think it's in the standard >> repos) It's a bulk file renamer. Using it, you can append 01_ to the >> name of each file in the first directory, 02_ to all in the second and >> so on. That will keep them sorted in the order you want. >> >> I use it, BTW, in the exact opposite way, taking the numbers off of file >> names. If you've ever ripped a commercial audio CD, you'll see those >> numbers appended to the names so that the tracks are in the correct >> order, regardless of their names. I get rid of the numbers, then load >> them onto my .mp3 player so that the files from different CDs get well >> mixed. > > > I think rename might do it. Will give that a try. > > Yes, I want to put all the tracks in one directory. Initially, > in early February, when I first got involved, I was able to > download 84 lectures at once and simply put them on a thumb > drive or iPod. Worked slick, but now they've screwed up the > system and shut out a whole class of customers, "The Teaching > Company, www.teach12.com." I can download samples fine but their > new security system "download manager" prevents the download > even after I have logged in? > > Thanks Joe and Kevin. > > That worked well. I installed "krename" from yum and assigned each file a 3 digit number at the front of it's name. Then they sorted in correct order. Thanks for the help, else I would still be struggling ! Bob -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines