Regular expressions are really indispensable and not learning even the basics of them is only a disservice to yourself. Location, Rename Special: (.), Visual Filters, Selection Filters, Move/Copy/Backup To, Recently Openedįiles, Recent Catalogs, Recently Included Catalogs.And I believe for rename patterns you can either caption them or for regexp use a regular expression comment, but I'm not in a position to verify this at the moment. Many MRU lists support a Sticky Section, e.g.: Address Bar & Go to, Find Files: Name, Find Files: The Sticky Section is always displayed on top of the whole list. Everything below this line is in the MRU Section. Sticky Section can be added via List Management, simply add this dummy item as section separator:Įverything above this line is in the Sticky Section. You can use this section for your all-time favorite items and carefully crafted patterns. The Sticky Section are permanent members of this list and will never be pushed out when new itemsĪre added. Sticky Section: Various most-recently-used (MRU) lists can have an optional Sticky Section. Not sure why XY was showing you invalid it should look like this: If instead you take more care in when and how you use the rename then you could get by with: ^(.
![phraseexpress regex phraseexpress regex](https://static1.makeuseofimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/PhraseExpress17.jpg)
My previous suggestion was attempting to protect you file extensions. As much as I admire RegEx afficionados, I was hoping for the Jack&Jill version, the usual stuff like "Remove "Unfortunately, a regular expression that can handle all cases quickly becomes rather complicated. And for putting "simple" in quotes - very appropriate. A quick and easy hack could be using a text expanding tool like PhraseExpress. Stef123 wrote:Thanks for your quick help.