Is there a way I can use the standard Vista gui search box to find files in a selected folder (& subfolders) that contain "(2)" in the filename but not ones that just have a "2"?
I have doubles of 5000+ files (along the lines of "namexyz", "namexyz (2)"), spread across multiple folders and subfolders.
I have files like "namexyz" also stored in different folders under the same name for (unzipped) archive purposes - sadly all third party file duplicate removal programs I've found will find the "namexyz"s across subfolders but don't find the "namexyz (2)"s.
I've tried looking online for search terms to use in the standard Vista gui search, however all I've found is that a search for "(2)" will find all filenames in the selected folder that have a 2 in the filename as brackets count as dead space.
The only answer I've found that's anywhere close refers to using Powershell, which I'm somewhat loathe to use as my command line skills are pants.
It's quite an easy thing to get (2) duplicates so I imagine that must be a fairly common occurence... logic suggests there must be an easy way to search and removed that I've somehow missed. Any help would be appreciated.
I have doubles of 5000+ files (along the lines of "namexyz", "namexyz (2)"), spread across multiple folders and subfolders.
I have files like "namexyz" also stored in different folders under the same name for (unzipped) archive purposes - sadly all third party file duplicate removal programs I've found will find the "namexyz"s across subfolders but don't find the "namexyz (2)"s.
I've tried looking online for search terms to use in the standard Vista gui search, however all I've found is that a search for "(2)" will find all filenames in the selected folder that have a 2 in the filename as brackets count as dead space.
The only answer I've found that's anywhere close refers to using Powershell, which I'm somewhat loathe to use as my command line skills are pants.
It's quite an easy thing to get (2) duplicates so I imagine that must be a fairly common occurence... logic suggests there must be an easy way to search and removed that I've somehow missed. Any help would be appreciated.