![]() The Options menu let us configure how PhotoRenamer handles duplicates, including color-coding stacks of very similar images (such as rough sorts or burst-mode series) as well as adding suffixes and more. Closing the Application Log pane at the bottom of the program's window and making some other changes cleaned up PhotoRenamer's layout a bit. You can quickly change the background image from the View menu as well as toggle through several display options. PhotoRenamer's user interface is a bit busy at first glance, but an Office-style Ribbon toolbar and a bit of practice make things easy enough to pick up, and an extensive Web-based manual and support options are available when needed. Three Masks are provided at startup, but you can add and edit up to 40 custom Masks. PhotoRenamer's Renaming Masks automatically rename batches of images with date and time, either from image data or EXIF metadata, based on strings of characters separated by the % symbol, such as %Y for Year with century or %y for Year without century. If you want a full-fledged renaming tool, you may want to take a look at Advanced Renamer or FocusOn Renamer instead.Although it's free and performs well, TGMDev's PhotoRenamer isn't for casual snapshooters, but its sophisticated batch renaming capabilities will suit professional photographers and advanced amateurs with a large image archive to manage. I would have liked to have an option to revert the task, and restore the original names. The program works with the AVI and MOV video formats. In addition to working with photos, Namexif can also be used to rename videos, as long as it contains some EXIF data. If you want to rename more files, use the "Again" button to go back to the main screen. The reason I say this is that Namexif will rename the files that you have added, but there is no way to undo the change.Ĭlick on the Finish button to exit the program. But, before you proceed, make sure you have a backup of your pictures. The program does not edit the media in any way, so the quality remains the same. If the files don't have any EXIF info, they will not be renamed. Hit the next button to start the renaming process, you will see a progress bar as Nameexif checks the media that you selected to see if they have EXIF tags. In case of files which have the same date/time, the tool adds an incremental number to the name. In addition to these settings, you can also adjust the time stamp with a custom value. The program can also use the ISO information to rename the files. Or you can add more data to it like FMR which is the former name. So if you don't want specific units in the name, you can exclude them. The other option allows you to customize the naming pattern. Basically, Namexif will use the timestamp to rename the file. You may choose the default format which is YYYY-MM-DD-HHhhMMmmSS, which represents the year, month, day, hours, minutes and seconds. The program displays a list of the files that you have added, you can clear the list with a single-click, but you can't remove individual images which is a little weird.Ĭlick next to set the renaming rules. The pop-up panel for the folder selection has a toggle to include sub-folders. all images in a folder, click on the Add Dir button and mark the directory. Namexif supports the following image formats: JPG, GIF, BMP, PNG and HEIC. Click on the add files button at the top of the screen, and use the browse window to select the photos that you want to rename. The next screen that you see is Namexif's main interface. ![]() The window describes the application's functionality, and you just have to click on the Next button to continue. Every time you run it, you'll see a screen that resembles an installer's page. ![]() The program's interface is a little different if you compare it with other software. This freeware tool renames photos using their EXIF data, i.e. If you agree with that, then you may like Namexif. Pictures from a birthday party, or a vacation, etc. It might be easier if the images had dates as the name, right, e.g.
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