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Apologies if this question has already been asked, I couldn't find anything…

Lets say I want to replace 'oldstuff' with 'newstuff'. Basically re-naming to replace. I try using this command:

mv ~/newstuff ~/oldstuff

But that only moves the folder 'newstuff' into the 'oldstuff' folder.

How would I replace 'oldstuff' with 'newstuff'?

I am running OS X 10.7.

Judith
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4 Answers4

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Another solution would be to use rsync. (Be careful with the trailing slashes. They are important).

This will copy everything in newstuff into oldstuff.

rsync -av ~/newstuff/ ~/oldstuff

And, the code below will copy everything in newstuff into oldstuff, and delete anything in oldstuff which is not in newstuff.

rsync -av --delete ~/newstuff/ ~/oldstuff

Note that neither of these commands will do anything to the files in ~/newstuff though. If you want to delete them, you'll have to do the rm command separately.

Kent
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If ~/oldstuff does not exist,

mv ~/newstuff ~/oldstuff

will rename newstuff to oldstuff. If it exists, it will move newstuff into oldstuff.

So, to answer your question, first remove ~/oldstuff (or rename it to olderstuff, see this question again on how to do it), then use the mv command as you did.

choroba
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3

You can try:

mv -f folder1/* folder2 && rmdir folder1

Will move everything in folder1, including files and directories to folder2.

-f: do not prompt before overwriting equivalent to --reply=yes.

mv man page.

stderr
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You have at least two options.

mv ~/newstuff/* ~/oldstuff
rmdir ~/newstuff
mv ~/oldstuff ~/newstuff

and

mv ~/oldstuff ~/ancientstuff
mv ~/newstuff ~/oldstuff