An Intelligent file organizer module which reads your file storing pattern & move the cluttered files accordingly!
| Author: | Abhinav Anand | 
|---|
Contents
Let's accept, no one likes to organize files on a regular basis. Even if you do, you wouldn't want to do it everytime you download a new file.
Guess what! Filezen got you covered.
Given a folder of your cluttered/unorganized files, using Filezen, you can achieve
the following
- If you've never maintained specific directories for your files. Then 
Filezen's Basic Scannercan create suitable folders and organize your file into them. - If you already have a pattern of directories for storing different files. Then 
Filezen's Advanced Scannercan read your file storing pattern and move your files accordingly. 
- Advanced Scanning
 - Basic Scanning
 - Minimum dependencies ( just uses 
Pathlibif only you're working with Python 2.x ) - Easy to use
 - Fast!
 - Returns 
JSONobjects - Support
 - OS Support: Linux, Windows, Mac
 - Language Support: Python 2.x, 3.x
 
1.3.1 Option 1: installing through pip (Recommended)
$ pip install Filezen
If you are behind a proxy
$ pip --proxy [username:password@]domain_name:port install Filezen
Note: If you get command not found then
$ sudo apt-get install python-pip should fix that
$ git clone https://github.com/ab-anand/Filezen.git
$ cd Filezen/
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ python setup.py installNote: If you get permission denied then
$ sudo python setup.py install should fix that
Simple Scanneruses a predefined mapping of filetypes to foldere.g. ".csv": "Documents".- Based on this mapping it creates directories(only if they don't exist already) and organizes files into them as shown in the above Fig.
 - Using 
Simple Scanner 
>>> from filezen import SimpleScanner as scanner
>>> input_directory = "/home/abhinav/Downloads"
>>> output_directory = "/home/abhinav/Documents"
>>> result = scanner.cleanDirectory(input_directory, outputPath=output_directory)
>>> print(result)
'{
    "Moved": [
        "FileA.pdf",
        "FileB.txt",
        "FileC.mp4",
        "FileD.log",
        "FileB.xyz"
    ],
    "NotMoved": [
    ]
}'- If no Output Directory is specified, then 
Simple Scannerwould treat Input Directory as the Output Directory thus creating folders in the Input Directory itself. 
Advanced Scannermaintains aheapfor each filetype/file-extension it encounters while scanning the Output Directory.- This 
heapcontains all the directory addresses where a particular filetype(e.g. "pdf") occurs. - The address having the highest number of occurrence of that filetype is at the top of the 
heap - With the help of this heap it finally decides the directory where a particular filetype has mostly occurred and thus moving the all such files into that directory.
 - As shown in the above image, 
Advanced Scannerscans thechildas well assibling directories(at the same level). - The level of child directories to scan is decided by 
depthparameter as shown in the example below. - By default, 
depth = 5 - Using 
Advanced Scanner 
>>> from filezen import AdvancedScanner as scanner
>>> input_directory = "/home/abhinav/Downloads"
>>> output_directory = "/home/abhinav/Documents"
>>> depth = 3
>>> result = scanner.cleanDirectory(input_directory, outputPath=output_directory, depth=depth)
>>> print(result)
'{
    "Moved": [
        "FileA.pdf",
        "FileB.txt",
        "FileC.mp4",
        "FileD.log",
        "FileE.xyz"
    ],
    "NotMoved": [
    ]
}'- If no Output Directory is specified, then 
Advanced Scannerwould read the folders in the Input Directory itself and move accordingly. 
Note: If a file with the same name is already present in the Output Directory then Filezen would
ignore the file and leave it to the user. In the resulting JSON, you'll get the all such filenames which
were not moved in the NotMoved list.
- KRETA - It is a command line application which uses 
Filezento organize file. 
For a detailed usage example, refer the documentation at Read the Docs
Please refer Contributing page for details
Please report the bugs at the issue tracker
Built with β₯ by Abhinav Anand under the MIT License Β©
You can find a copy of the License at http://abhinav.mit-license.org/




