1

Recently I've encountered yet another problem in my Batch file. Where I want something to be performed, I'm getting the following error:

= was unexpected at this time.

I've had this error before, however it's always due to a small mistake which I fixed up. This time I can't identify it.

choice /c 12b /n
if %errorlevel%==1 (
if not exist C:\ntbobdings\1.txt (
set bding=Variable
set bdingno=1
goto IfNot
)

What is wrong? It's a small area, yet the if %errorlevel%==1 (blah) seems fine.

2
  • You'd probably get that error if bdingno isn't defined. Turn echo on and you should be able to see exactly where it's happening and what's wrong. Nov 6, 2013 at 23:45
  • 1
    In this example you are missing a closing bracket.
    – unclemeat
    Nov 7, 2013 at 0:24

2 Answers 2

6

The problem is if the variable your using has no value it returns - well nothing. Thus you're inputing:

if ==value Echo Test.

To avoid this surrounding the variable in "'s even if it has no value you input:

if ""=="value" Echo Test.

In other words just do:

choice /c 12b /n
if "%errorlevel%"=="1" (
    if not exist C:\ntbobdings\1.txt (
    set bding=Variable
    set %bdingno%=1
    goto IfNot
))

And that should work fine and help you understand whats wrong.

Mona.

6
  • I tried coating my 'if' statement variables in quotation marks, however I still get the same error. Thank you very much for your input, however. I might upload some more of the code to help anyone answering. Nov 7, 2013 at 0:03
  • 1
    Using set %bdingno%=1 will create a variable named whatever the output of %bdingno% is. He hasn't said that this is what he wants. It should be set bdingno=1.
    – unclemeat
    Nov 7, 2013 at 0:33
  • @Daemon - that is incorrect; if, for example, %bdingo% contained the word 'test', that line would create a variable called %"test"% containing "1". It works in the if statement as it is just a comparison - it is a way of handling empty variables.
    – unclemeat
    Nov 7, 2013 at 0:38
  • 2
    @aruuu Apologies, you are, of course, correct. That's what I get for skimming the answer. I'll delete my comment to prevent future confusion.
    – Taylor Hx
    Nov 7, 2013 at 0:53
  • Um, no - %errorlevel% ALWAYS contains a value, although the principle is sound. The problem may be the missing close-parenthesis which would include the unposted remaining code into the if %errorlevel% statement, OR it could be that the variable errorlevel has been assigned a value of space(s) or comma or semicolon which overrides the magic values assigned by CMD (provided the error isn;t actully in the unposted following code)
    – Magoo
    Nov 7, 2013 at 0:55
2

Try this:

@ECHO OFF &SETLOCAL
choice /c 12b /n
if %errorlevel%==1 (
    if not exist C:\ntbobdings\1.txt (
        set bding=Variable
        set bdingno=1
        goto IfNot
    )
)
goto:eof
:ifnot
echo Hello world!

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