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I've seen some scripts examples over SO, but noone of them seems to provide examples of how to read filenames from a .txt list.

This example is good, but to copy all files from A from to B folder

xcopy c:\olddir\*.java c:\newdir /D /E /Q /Y

But I need something like the next, where I can fill actually the source and destination folder:

 @echo off
 set src_folder = c:\whatever\*.*
 set dst_folder = c:\foo
 xcopy /S/E/U %src_folder% %dst_folder%

And instead of src_folder = c:\whatever\*.*, those *.* need to be list of files readden from a txt file.

File-list.txt (example)

file1.pds
filex.pbd
blah1.xls

Could someone suggest me how to do it?

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2  
In bash, this would be a piece of cake. Darn you Windows and your inability to comply! – Blender Jun 6 '11 at 20:58
1  
This is one of the things batch programming was made for, so it's a piece of cake here, too. – indiv Jun 6 '11 at 21:27
    
how can I add an extension to %%i? on filelist.txt I have the file names, but the files are .pbd extension – BoDiE2003 Jun 7 '11 at 18:39
up vote 20 down vote accepted

Given your list of file names in a file called File-list.txt, the following lines should do what you want:

@echo off
set src_folder=c:\whatever
set dst_folder=c:\target
for /f "tokens=*" %%i in (File-list.txt) DO (
    xcopy /S/E/U "%src_folder%\%%i" "%dst_folder%"
)
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3  
to cope with blanks in the filenames in filelist use option "tokens=*" in the FOR command. – PA. Jun 7 '11 at 6:49
    
It says that It cannot find the files, plus, I dont uderstand where to add "tokens=*" – BoDiE2003 Jun 7 '11 at 18:45
    
for /f "tokens=*" %%i in (File-list.txt) DO xcopy /S/E/U "%src_folder%\%%i" "%dst_folder%" – Carel Apr 3 '13 at 9:49
1  
I was getting file not found with this answer. Got it working with a slight modification: for /f "tokens=*" %%i in (File-list.txt) DO xcopy "%src_folder%%%i" "%dst_folder%" – Anthony Mar 12 '14 at 1:22
    
Thanks @Anthony I've edited the answer to fix this problem, by removing the trailing slash from the src_folder (which is equivalent to what you did). – sparrowt Dec 4 '14 at 16:46

I just tried to use Frank Bollack and sparrowt's answer, but without success because it included a /U switch for xcopy. It's my understanding that /U means that the files will only be copied if they already exist in the destination which wasn't the case for me and doesn't appear to be the case for the original questioner. It may have meant to have been a /V for verify, which would make more sense.

Removing the /U switch fixed the problem.

@echo off
set src_folder=c:\whatever
set dst_folder=c:\target
for /f "tokens=*" %%i in (File-list.txt) DO (
xcopy /S/E "%src_folder%\%%i" "%dst_folder%"
)
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thanks this worked – Asheh Jun 10 '16 at 11:55

This will do it:

@echo off
set src_folder=c:\batch
set dst_folder=c:\batch\destination
set file_list=c:\batch\file_list.txt

if not exist "%dst_folder%" mkdir "%dst_folder%"

for /f "delims=" %%f in (%file_list%) do (
    xcopy "%src_folder%\%%f" "%dst_folder%\"
)
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1  
Some caveats (1)if not exist only works for files; (2) "usebackq" is useless in this syntax, I would rather include "tokens=*" to cope with blanks in the filenames; and (3)use " surrounding the parameters of XCOPY – PA. Jun 7 '11 at 6:47
1  
@PA IF NOT EXIST works for files AND folders. – aphoria Jun 7 '11 at 12:44

This will also keep the files original file directory:

@echo off
set src_folder=c:\whatever
set dst_folder=c:\target
set file_list=C:\file_list.txt

for /f "tokens=*" %%i in (%file_list%) DO (
   echo f | xcopy /E /C /R /Y "%src_folder%\%%i" "%dst_folder%\%%i"
)
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The following will copy files from a list and preserve the directory structure. Useful when you need to compress files which have been changed in a range of Git commits, for example. It will also deal with spaces in the directory/file names, and works with both relative and absolute paths:

@echo off

setlocal enabledelayedexpansion

set "source=input dir"
set "target=output dir"

for /f "tokens=* usebackq" %%A in ("file_list.txt") do (
    set "FILE=%%A"
    set "dest_file_full=%target%\!FILE:%source%=!"
    set "dest_file_filename=%%~nxA"
    call set "dest_file_dir=%%dest_file_full:!dest_file_filename!=%%"
    if not exist "!dest_file_dir!" (
        md "!dest_file_dir!"
    )
    set "source_file_full=%source%\!FILE:%source%=!"
    copy "!source_file_full!" "!dest_file_dir!"
)
pause

Note that if your file list has absolute paths, you must set source as an absolute path as well!

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