I'm trying to open a new command window in a BAT file:
start %windir%\system32\cmd.exe
After it opens, I'd like to execute a BAT command in the new window:
echo "test in new window"
How can I do this?
Edit your bat file by right clicking on it and select “Edit” from the list. Your file will open in notepad. Now add “PAUSE” word at the end of your bat file. This will keep the Command Prompt window open until you do not press any key.
Try using the conditional execution & or the && between each command either with a copy and paste into the cmd.exe window or in a batch file. Additionally, you can use the double pipe || symbols instead to only run the next command if the previous command failed.
You may already find your answer because it was some time ago you asked. But I tried to do something similar when coding ror. I wanted to run "rails server" in a new cmd window so I don't have to open a new cmd and then find my path again.
What I found out was to use the K switch like this:
start cmd /k echo Hello, World!
start before "cmd" will open the application in a new window and "/K" will execute "echo Hello, World!" after the new cmd is up.
You can also use the /C switch for something similar.
start cmd /C pause
This will then execute "pause" but close the window when the command is done. In this case after you pressed a button. I found this useful for "rails server", then when I shutdown my dev server I don't have to close the window after.
Use the following in your batch file:
start cmd.exe /c "more-batch-commands-here"
or
start cmd.exe /k "more-batch-commands-here"
/c Carries out the command specified by string and then terminates
/k Carries out the command specified by string but remains
Consult the cmd.exe documentation using cmd /?
for more details.
The proper formatting of the command string becomes more complicated when using arguments with spaces. See the examples below. Note the nested double quotes in some examples.
Examples:
Run a program and pass a filename parameter: CMD /c write.exe c:\docs\sample.txt
Run a program and pass a long filename: CMD /c write.exe "c:\sample documents\sample.txt"
Spaces in program path: CMD /c ""c:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office\Winword.exe""
Spaces in program path + parameters: CMD /c ""c:\Program Files\demo.cmd"" Parameter1 Param2
CMD /k ""c:\batch files\demo.cmd" "Parameter 1 with space" "Parameter2 with space""
Launch demo1 and demo2: CMD /c ""c:\Program Files\demo1.cmd" & "c:\Program Files\demo2.cmd""
Source: http://ss64.com/nt/cmd.html
The above answers helped me. But still required some figuring out. Here is an example script I use to start 3 processes for web development. It results in 3 windows staying open, as they need to run continously.
Mongo is globally added to my path, so I don't need to cd like I do for the other two programs. Of course the path to your files will vary, but hopefully this will help.
:: Start MongoDB
start cmd.exe /k "mongod"
:: cd app directory, and start it
cd my-app
start cmd.exe /k "npm run dev"
:: cd to api server, and start that
cd ../my-app-api
start cmd.exe /k "npm run dev"
This is not very easy.
The best approach is to have the part of your script that you want to be executed in a "new window" to be in a separate .bat file. This might be impractical if e.g. you need a lot of state from the rest of your script (variables, etc). One option is to pass any values you need (e.g. dir to operate in) to the batch file:
start cmd.exe stuff.bat %this_dir%
If you have a large amount of state to transmit you might consider generating a batch file at runtime:
set foo=Hello, World
set list_me=%userprofile%
set tmpdir=c:\windows\temp
set tmp=%tmpdir%\tmp.foo
del /q /f "%tmp%"
echo.echo %foo%>>"%tmp%"
echo.dir "%list_me%">>>"%tmp"
start cmd.exe "%tmp%"
del /q /f "%tmp%"
Obviously this is a trivial example.
Thanks to all here in Stack Overflow; this solution solves the above question but is extended to automatically run these tasks:
I guess my project is called "antiquorum."
Create an "init.bat" file in your %USERPROFILE% directory (open a cmd window and take a look at the path to the left of the cursor to know what %USERPROFILE% is)
@echo off
cd C:/projects/rails3/antiquorum
if "%1" == "antiquorum" GOTO start
if "%1" == "worker" GOTO worker
if "%1" == "server" GOTO server
if "%1" == "" GOTO end
:start
start cmd /k %USERPROFILE%\init.bat worker
start cmd /k %USERPROFILE%\init.bat server
TIMEOUT 30
start "" "http://localhost:3000/"
GOTO end
:server
rails s
GOTO end
:worker
rake jobs:work
:end
In a new command line window type: C:> init antiquorum
The code opens two more cmd windows and a browser. TIMEOUT avoids errors in the browser.
The :start section does the work. You can run tasks 1,2 or 4 separately by typing params as: server, worker, or none to leave a cmd opened in root of "antiquorum" project.
Enjoy.
If I understand you correctly doing this in side your bat file will open Command prompt and print your message to screen.
cmd.exe hello world
hope this helps.
to run a python file in a new cmd window with spaces in the file name:
start cmd.exe /k python "C:\Program Files\HelloWorld.py"
Adding /k
between two commands executes both command in order
.
Example:
cmd /k echo "hello"
this command will first open command prompt
then execute echo "hello"
command
I wanted my window to remain open after I killed or restarted Firebase so I used two batch files.
Desktop file for easy access: run_firebase.bat
:
--------------START FILE CONTENTS--------------
start cmd /k C:\dev\init_firebase_batch.bat
---------------END FILE CONTENTS---------------
Batch file to run the intended results: C:\dev\init_firebase_batch.bat
--------------START FILE CONTENTS--------------
cd C:\dev\aptr_datasync\aperture-customer-hub
firebase emulators:start
---------------END FILE CONTENTS---------------
So ... double click run_firebase.bat
and it runs the second batch. After Ctrl+C out of my process the window remains open. Seems trivial but I don't like distractions while I'm working on code.
I only spent time solving because I thought it would be simple. Hopefully this creates that simplicity for others.
I think this checks off the questions in the initial post:
[x] I'm trying to open a new command window in a BAT file
[x] After it opens, I'd like to execute a BAT command in the new window
Extending answer from @Dan Zuzevich. Below is CD "Change Directory" if your target file is on different drive. For example it have to call file from drive C and drive D.
:: Start MongoDB
start cmd.exe /k "mongod"
:: cd app directory, and start it
cd C:\project\dev
C:
start cmd.exe /k "npm run dev"
:: cd to api server, and start that
cd D:\api\server
D:
start cmd.exe /k "npm run dev"
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