![]() Under the ‘Rename Finder Items’ option, pull down the submenu for “Add Date or Time” and choose “Add Text” instead.Choose “Don’t Add” when asked (unless you want to make a copy of every file you rename, that’s your call but not what we’re aiming for here).Use the search box to look for “rename”, then select “Rename Finder Items” and drag that to the workflow panel.At the splash screen, choose to create a new “Application”.Launch “Automator”, found within the /Applications folder of OS X.For example, if you have a group of files named sample1, sample2, sample3, dropping them into this application would rename them all to sample1-renamed, sample2-renamed, and sample3-renamed, respectively. This is going to create a small application that appends text to every file dropped onto it, effectively renaming the file by adding another specified text item into the files existing names. Make a Simple Batch File Renaming App for Mac OS X Of course, this Automator action could also be modified heavily to be made more complex, handle additional file functions like resizing images at the same time, or rename with wildcards and incrementing, but for this specific article we’re aiming to keep things easy and accessible to everyone, even novice users who are new to scripting and automation. Due to the simplicity and general user-friendliness of this specific usage of Automator, advanced users may prefer this command line method of renaming files instead. If you’re unfamiliar with Automator and creating Automator applications in OS X you’ll find the process to be quite simple, so just follow along and you’ll have a simple working app to rename files in no time at all. If you have tons of files to rename, you’ll find this is much better than renaming them yourself in the Finder or through the title bar. ![]() This is similar to the other Automator utilities we have built and covered here before, but this time around the end result is an OS X application that lets you rename a file, multiple files, or a group of many files by adding some predefined text into the file name, all with the same Finder-based drag and drop simplicity of usage. If you need to rename a group of files on a Mac by appending some text to each files name, a great free option is to use a simple Automator action and save it as an application.
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