How to sort files into folders by filetype on bash (with 'file' command)?

How about something like this:


mkdir -p `file -b --mime-type *|uniq`
for x in `ls`
do
        cp $x `file -b --mime-type $x`
done

I use cp, it can't work with directories.


Dadam's answer adjustment:

#!/bin/bash

file --mime-type -F"&" [YOUR PATH]/* > filetypes.txt
mkdir -p `cut -f2 -d"&" filetypes.txt | sed 's/[ ,:]//g' | sort -u`
IFS=$'\n'
for x in `cut -f1 -d"&" filetypes.txt`
do
  mv "$x" `file -b --mime-type "$x" | sed 's/[ ,:]//g'`
done 

This answer does not execute file command multiple times for each file, which is unnecessary

file  -N --mime-type -F"-&-" * | awk -F"-&-" 'BEGIN{q="\047"}
{
  o=$1
  gsub("/","_",$2);sub("^ +","",$2)
  if (!($2  in dir )) {
    dir[$2]
    cmd="mkdir -p "$2
    print cmd
    #system(cmd) #uncomment to use
  }
  files[o]=$2
}
END{
 for(f in files){
    cmd="cp "q f q"  "q files[f]"/"f".jpg" q
    print cmd
    #system(cmd) #uncomment to use
 }
}'

similarly, can be done with bash4+ script using associative arrays.