Respuesta :

If you’re using your mouse, you have no less than three ways to select a file’s name and rename it. You can:

Click to select the file and then click the “Rename” button on the Home menu.Click to select file and then click the name of the selected file.Right-click the file and then select “Rename” on the context menu.

And if you prefer sticking with your keyboard, you can just use your arrow keys (or start typing the file name) to select a file and then hit F2 to select the file name.

Once you’ve got the file name selected—and you’ll notice only the file name itself is selected, not the extension—you can type a new file name.

When you’re done typing the file name, you can press Enter (or just click somewhere else) to save the new name.

Here’s where things get interesting: you can also hit the Tab key to automatically select the next file name in the folder so that you can immediately begin typing a new name for it. Keep hitting Tab and typing names this way and you can easily rename all the files in a folder if you’re so inclined.

If you’re renaming a bunch of files in the same folder and those files don’t need completely different names from one another, Windows provides an easier way to rename those files in batch. Start by selecting a bunch of files—you can hold down the Ctrl key to select multiple files at once, or Shift to select a range of files. When you’ve got the files selected, use one of the rename commands—the button on the Home menu, the command on the context menu, or just press F2. You’ll see that all the files remain selected, but the first one in the group gets its name highlighted so you can type a new name.

This the ways I know. If it is useful thank me but if it is meaningless just delete it .

But I hope this will help You.

 




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