I am trying to replicate the functionality of the cat
command in Unix.
I would like to avoid solutions where I explicitly read both files into variables, concatenate the variables together, and then write out the concatenated variable.
I am trying to replicate the functionality of the cat
command in Unix.
I would like to avoid solutions where I explicitly read both files into variables, concatenate the variables together, and then write out the concatenated variable.
Simply use the Get-Content
and Set-Content
cmdlets:
Get-Content inputFile1.txt, inputFile2.txt | Set-Content joinedFile.txt
You can concatenate more than two files with this style, too.
If the source files are named similarly, you can use wildcards:
Get-Content inputFile*.txt | Set-Content joinedFile.txt
Note 1: PowerShell 5 and older versions allowed this to be done more concisely using the aliases cat
and sc
for Get-Content
and Set-Content
respectively. However, these aliases are problematic because cat
is a system command in *nix systems, and sc
is a system command in Windows systems - therefore using them is not recommended, and in fact sc
is no longer even defined as of PowerShell Core (v7). The PowerShell team recommends against using aliases in general.
Note 2: Be careful with wildcards - if you try to output to inputFiles.txt
(or similar that matches the pattern), PowerShell will get into an infinite loop! (I just tested this.)
Note 3: Outputting to a file with >
does not preserve character encoding! This is why using Set-Content
is recommended.
Set-Content
uses national code page (e.g. Windows-1252 for English). If the source files contain other coding (e.g. Windows-1251 or UTF8), you must set correct encoding sc file.txt -Encoding UTF8
(numbers such as 1251 for Russian are supported since v6.2)
May 3, 2019 at 9:06
Add-Content
is that if you run the command twice, the aggregated file is twice as long. A good replacement is Out-File
. Example here
Aug 6, 2019 at 16:02
Get-Content my.bin -Raw | Set-Content my.bin -NoNewline
will not alter my.bin
except the timestamps. -Raw
preserves any CR/LF bytes, while -NoNewline
prevents PowerShell from adding its own CR/LF bytes.
Jun 23, 2020 at 10:36
Do not use >
; it messes up the character encoding. Use:
Get-Content files.* | Set-Content newfile.file
ÿþ
which is FF FE
at the beginning of my concatenated file when using >
.
Aug 23, 2019 at 20:38
>
is an effective alias of Out-File
, which in Windows PowerShell defaults to "Unicode" (UTF-16LE), whereas Set-Content
defaults to the system's legacy ANSI code page. While the latter encoding is less problematic, note that both cmdlets have the potential to alter the encoding of the input files, because their default encoding is unrelated to the encoding of the input files (which is information that PowerShell doesn't make available). Note that PowerShell (Core) 7+ now fortunately defaults to (BOM-less) UTF-8, consistently across all cmdlets.
Feb 22, 2022 at 18:57
In cmd
, you can do this:
copy one.txt+two.txt+three.txt four.txt
In PowerShell this would be:
cmd /c copy one.txt+two.txt+three.txt four.txt
While the PowerShell way would be to use gc, the above will be pretty fast, especially for large files. And it can be used on on non-ASCII files too using the /B
switch.
/b
to the target file to prevent byte 0x1A being added to the end of the file: copy one.txt+two.txt+three.txt four.txt /b
. See this Q&A.
Apr 21, 2022 at 12:38
You could use the Add-Content cmdlet. Maybe it is a little faster than the other solutions, because I don't retrieve the content of the first file.
gc .\file2.txt| Add-Content -Path .\file1.txt
gc
(Get-Content
) does retrieve the file content, line by line by default. Use Set-Content
, not Add-Content
, because the latter will preserve any preexisting content in the output file. Note the potential to end up with a different character encoding in the output file (irrespective of what cmdlet you use), as discussed in the comments on the accepted answer.
Feb 22, 2022 at 18:59
To concat files in command prompt it would be
type file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt > files.txt
PowerShell converts the type
command to Get-Content
, which means you will get an error when using the type
command in PowerShell because the Get-Content
command requires a comma separating the files. The same command in PowerShell would be
Get-Content file1.txt,file2.txt,file3.txt | Set-Content files.txt
I used:
Get-Content c:\FileToAppend_*.log | Out-File -FilePath C:\DestinationFile.log
-Encoding ASCII -Append
This appended fine. I added the ASCII encoding to remove the nul characters Notepad++ was showing without the explicit encoding.
If you need to order the files by specific parameter (e.g. date time):
gci *.log | sort LastWriteTime | % {$(Get-Content $_)} | Set-Content result.log
To keep encoding and line endings:
Get-Content files.* -Raw | Set-Content newfile.file -NoNewline
Note: AFAIR, whose parameters aren't supported by old Powershells (<3? <4?)
-Encoding unicode
to the end of the command you suggest (in addition to your two parameters) allows Excel to open a combination of CSV files correctly. See learn.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/… for more.
You can do something like:
get-content input_file1 > output_file
get-content input_file2 >> output_file
Where >
is an alias for "out-file", and >> is an alias for "out-file -append".
Since most of the other replies often get the formatting wrong (due to the piping), the safest thing to do is as follows:
add-content $YourMasterFile -value (get-content $SomeAdditionalFile)
I know you wanted to avoid reading the content of $SomeAdditionalFile into a variable, but in order to save for example your newline formatting i do not think there is proper way to do it without.
A workaround would be to loop through your $SomeAdditionalFile line by line and piping that into your $YourMasterFile. However this is overly resource intensive.
I think the "powershell way" could be :
set-content destination.log -value (get-content c:\FileToAppend_*.log )