2

Having read an existing post on stackoverflow and done some reading around on the net. I thought it was time to post my question before I lost too much hair!

I have the following code within a batch file which I double click to run, under Windows XP SP3:

SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION

::Observe variable is not defined
SET test

::Define initial value
SET test = "Two"

::Observe initial value is set
SET test

::Verify if the contents of the variable matches our condition
If "!test!" == "Two" GOTO TWO

::First Place holder
:ONE

::Echo first response
ECHO "One"

::Second Place holder
:TWO

::Echo second response
ECHO "Two"

::Await user input
PAUSE

ENDLOCAL

Basically I am trying to establish if I can navigate through my script using conditionals. It seems apparent that I am getting some issues with variable scope and delayed variable expansion yet I'm a little lost on what I'm doing wrong.

Can anyone point me in the right direction?

2 Answers 2

5

Your immediate problem is that you're setting the variable to the value < "Two"> which you can see here:

@echo off

SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION

::Observe variable is not defined
SET test

::Define initial value
SET test = "Two"

::Observe initial value is set
SET test
echo %test%
echo..%test %.

::Verify if the contents of the variable matches our condition
If "!test!" == "Two" GOTO TWO

::First Place holder
:ONE

::Echo first response
ECHO "One"

::Second Place holder
:TWO

::Echo second response
ECHO "Two"

::Await user input
PAUSE

ENDLOCAL

which produces:

Environment variable test not defined
test = "Two"
. "Two".
"One"
"Two"
Press any key to continue . . .

The reason your "set test" is outputting the variable is the same reason why "set t" would - if there's no variable of the specific name, it outputs all variables starting with that name.

The set command is also a finicky little beast and does not like spaces surrounding the '=' characters; it incorporates them (and the quotes by the way) into the environment variable name and the value assigned to it. Instead, use:

set test=Two

Also, where you're using delayed expansion, it doesn't matter since %test% and !test! would expand the same. It's useful in statements like:

if "!test!" == "Two" (
    set test=TwoAndABit
    echo !test!
)

The inner echo will output TwoAndABit whereas %test%, which is expanded when the whole if-statement is encountered, would cause it to output Two.

Still, I always use delayed expansion everywhere just for consistency.

2
  • Thanks for the well articulated response Pax! All read, tested and resolved my end :) Dec 15, 2008 at 11:50
  • It's come a long way since the bad old MS-DOS command.com days - it's still not ksh or bash, but it IS workable.
    – paxdiablo
    Dec 15, 2008 at 12:00
0

The SET command takes everything after the equal sign through the last non-blank character. Your command...

SET test = "Two"

...is setting the variable test to the value "Two" with a leading blank and the quotes, not just the string Two.

So when you test ...

If "!test!" == "Two" GOTO TWO

you are really testing...

If " "Two"" == "Two" GOTO TWO

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.