If a file has a file extension it’s likely required. If you want to delete a file extension because you want it hidden, use Windows to hide file extensions. For help with hiding and showing file extensions, see: How to view a computer file extension.
A file extension is part of a file name and can be removed by renaming the file. Below are the steps and examples of how to delete file extension for each of the operating systems.
Windows users
Before a file extension can be deleted, you must have the show file extensions enabled. By default, this option is disabled.
Windows users.
MS-DOS and Windows command line users.
Unix and Linux users.
Rename a single file.
Rename multiple files.
Rename multiple files, including subdirectories.
Rename a single file.
Rename multiple files.
Rename multiple files, including subdirectories.
How to view a computer file extension.
Assuming the file is named myfile.txt, we remove its file extension by performing the following steps.
- Right-click the file (not the shortcut).
- Select Rename in the menu
- Erase the .txt from myfile.txt and press Enter.
- Click Yes on the warning about the file becoming unusable if you’re sure you want to delete the file name extension.
Deleting multiple file extensions
If you want to delete the file extensions of multiple files, we recommend you enter the Windows command line and follow the steps below.
MS-DOS and Windows command line users
Open an MS-DOS or Windows command line.
Change the directory to the location of where the file is located. In our example below, we rename the file “myfile.txt” to “myfile” to delete the file extension.
move myfile.txt myfile
Unless the file already exists, you’ll get no message or an “OK” message indicating that the file was renamed and the file extension was removed.
- See the move command page for more information about this command.
Delete multiple file extensions
To delete the file extension of all files with the same file extension, follow the steps below.
The example below we delete the file extension on all the files in the current directory that end with .txt.
ren *.txt *.
- See the ren or rename command page for more examples.
Unix and Linux users
In Unix-like operating systems such as Linux, you can use the mv command to rename a single file or directory.
In our example, we are using an asterisk as a wildcard that tells the command line that we want every file name.
To rename multiple files, you can use the rename utility.
To rename files recursively across subdirectories, you can use the find and rename commands together.
Rename a single file or directory
Change the directory to the location of where the file is located. In our example below, we remove the file extension of “myfile.txt.” Additionally, this example is done from the shell and not a GUI.
mv myfile.txt myfile
If the operation is successful, you are returned to the shell prompt.
- See the mv command page for more information on this command.
Rename multiple files
To rename multiple files, use the rename utility. On most systems, it is not installed by default, but can be installed with your package manager. In Ubuntu, Debian, or Linux Mint, it can be installed with apt.
sudo apt install rename
The general syntax of the rename command is as follows.
rename [ options… ] regexp files
The parameter regexp is a Perl regular expression. To substitute text, the regular expression form is ’s/pattern1/pattern2/'.
The files parameter specifies which files are processed by the command. You can provide a list of files, or a wildcard to be expanded by the shell. The wildcard * specifies all files.
Useful options include -n (show what changes would be made, but change nothing), -v (show verbose output), and -f (force overwrite of new files if they exist).
For example, if you want to remove the file extension .txt from all files in the current directory, you can run the following command.
rename -n ’s/.txt//’ *
In the above command, the regexp parameter is enclosed in single quotes, to “protect” the string, preventing the shell from interpreting it. It is passed literally to the rename command.
In the regular expression, pattern1 is the file extension .txt, and pattern2 is an empty string, specifying that pattern1 should be replaced with nothing.
The backslash is an escape character, meaning “treat the next character literally.” The period must be escaped, because if not escaped, it is interpreted by rename as a regular expression metacharacter that matches any character.
The -n option performs a dry run, displaying what changes would be made, but changing nothing. The output of the above command would look like this:
rename(file1.txt, file1) rename(file2.txt, file2) rename(file3.txt, file3)
If the new file names look correct, you can run the same command again without the -n option to perform the rename. Specify -v if you want to see what files are being renamed.
rename -v ’s/.txt//’ *
file1.txt renamed as file1 file2.txt renamed as file2 file3.txt renamed as file3
- See the rename command page for more information on this command.
Rename multiple files, including subdirectories
To rename files including those in subdirectories, use the find command, and pipe its output to rename, which processes the list of files found.
For example, to remove the extension .txt from all files in the current directory, and in any subdirectories, run the following command.
find . -iname ‘*.txt’ | rename -v ’s/.txt//’
The above command says: “Recursively find all files in the current directory and its subdirectories, whose name ends in .txt. Pipe those filenames to the rename command, and substitute .txt with nothing.” Its output would look like the following.
Reading filenames from file handle (GLOB(0x55dda79131b8)) ./dir1/file4.txt renamed as ./dir1/file4 ./file1.txt renamed as ./file1 ./file2.txt renamed as ./file2 ./file3.txt renamed as ./file3 ./dir2/file5.txt renamed as ./dir2/file5
- See the find command page for more information on this command.
Related information
- How to change a file extension.
- How to change or rename a file, folder, or directory.
- Computer file extensions help.
- See our file extension definition for further information and related links.
- Computer file help and support.