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First, apologies for my poor coding ability, however I have spent a few hours reading the forums and giving it a crack, so I would really appreciate any help with the following problem:

I have 3 text files, from which I would like to take the filename, 3rd line of data, 5th line, and 7th line and pop them into a single CSV, such as follows:

filename1, linedata3, linedata5, linedata7
filename2, linedata3, linedata5, linedata7
filename3, linedata3, linedata5, linedata7

Simples, eh? not so, for I am rather lacking in my coding "skillz" and could do with your help. Here's what I have so far:

First a batch file (go.bat):

@echo off
for /f "skip=2 delims=" %%i in (%1) do >>lines.txt echo %~n1 %%i & goto :EOF

Then manual command line entries:

go.bat file1.txt
go.bat file2.txt
go.bat file3.txt

So, as you can see, I have done this for one line of text, but don't know how to append lines 3 and 5 onto the end of the output. Also, what I'd really like is a proper command line entry so I can do this for all text files in the directory. I tried the following, but seem to be missing something:

for %i in (*.*) do go.bat "%i"

Any body help?

Thanks muchlies! James

2 Answers 2

2
@echo off
setlocal EnableDelayedExpansion
if exist result.csv del result.csv
for %%f in (*.txt) do (
    set i=0
    for /F "delims=" %%l in (%%f) do (
        set /A i+=1
        set line!i!=%%l
    )
    echo %%f, !line3!, !line5!, !line7! >> result.csv
)

This Batch file process all .txt files in the directory, as you said.

1
  • +1, it works, but it fails with exclamation marks and empty lines and it's really hard to solve that
    – jeb
    Oct 22, 2011 at 9:50
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You could read the lines with another construct.

setlocal EnableDelayedExpansion
< %1 (
Set /p line1=

Set /p line2=
Set /p line3=
Set /p line4=
Set /p line5=
Set /p line6=
Set /p line7=
)
Echo %1,!line3!,!line5!,!line7!

Or with a loop (Andriy)

Setlocal EnableDelayedExpansion
<%1 (
  For /L %%n in (1 1 7) do (
    Set /p line%%n=
  )
)
Echo %1,!line3!,!line5!,!line7!
7
  • +1, but I wonder if a FOR /L loop would do as well. Something like < %1 (FOR /L %%L IN (1,1,7) DO SET /P line%%L=). Basically, same idea as yours, only it would be a loop instead of repeating similar lines. What do you think?
    – Andriy M
    Oct 22, 2011 at 0:01
  • @Andriy Your idea (on using a loop to read several lines of the file in several line variables) was already used in the other answer (my answer) in the line set line!i!=%%l.
    – Aacini
    Oct 22, 2011 at 5:15
  • Yes you can also use a 'for /L' loop, but in my opinion it's a completly different solution than Aacini's
    – jeb
    Oct 22, 2011 at 9:59
  • @Aacini: jeb is right, there is a difference. The loop I've suggested merely replaces the series of almost identical lines (SET /P lineX=). It doesn't change the way the file is being read. This solution reads the file with the < filename ( … ) construct in conjunction with a set of SET /P line= commands (now replaced with a loop), while yours uses a FOR /F loop to retrieve the lines. Well, you can now see that for yourself.
    – Andriy M
    Oct 22, 2011 at 10:14
  • @Andriy: of course, the method to read the file is entirely different: one method use set /p lineX= and read just 7 lines, and the other method use FOR /F and read all the lines in the file. However, the method to use a loop to store the lines in several variables is practically the same as easily can be seen if we compare the commands that create the variables: set line!i!= vs set /p line%%n=. In my previous comment I did NOT mention that both answers represent the same solution (as jeb said) nor even the same or similar method...
    – Aacini
    Oct 23, 2011 at 4:55

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