296

What is the Windows batch equivalent of the Linux shell command echo -n which suppresses the newline at the end of the output?

The idea is to write on the same line inside a loop.

5
  • 3
  • 2
    this got me nearly crazy..I knew echo could take -n but on the cmd.exe it just wouldn't work^^
    – panny
    Feb 13, 2013 at 11:32
  • 15
    @panny - Despite the common name, echo is not the same command between Windows and Posix. The same as nslookup, it has different options. So the comment "I knew echo could take -n" in the context of a question to do with Windows, is incorrect.
    – user66001
    Jun 3, 2013 at 18:03
  • @user66001 - "echoX -n" on Windows is detailed in an answer below posted today.
    – Bilbo
    Sep 12, 2020 at 5:14
  • @Bilbo - Not sure about your use of batch, but 99% of the time I am using it to help automate something for someone else, on not-my-device. Not easy or efficient to supply a batch files with a 3rd party util. (especially if this 3rd party util is the .exe variety, given the virus landscape 7 years on from my original comment).
    – user66001
    Sep 13, 2020 at 6:15

20 Answers 20

322

Using set and the /p parameter you can echo without newline:

C:\> echo Hello World
Hello World

C:\> echo|set /p="Hello World"
Hello World
C:\>

Source

14
  • 111
    The pipe is very slow as it creates two extra cmd-tasks, faster is <nul set /p =Hello. set /p can't echo an equal sign as first character nor spaces/tabs.
    – jeb
    Aug 18, 2011 at 18:23
  • 16
    It's nearly 15 times faster on my system
    – jeb
    Aug 22, 2011 at 16:58
  • 32
    Add quotes around "Hello World" to prevent the extraneous space after the d.
    – Brian
    May 31, 2012 at 19:45
  • 18
    Warning: This will change ERRORLEVEL to 1. See answer by @xmechanix.
    – CoperNick
    May 12, 2014 at 14:21
  • 8
    @user246694 < nul is a redirection from the NUL device. It contains nothing, but that is enough for set /p to stop waiting for user input
    – jeb
    Jul 17, 2014 at 5:53
142

Using: echo | set /p= or <NUL set /p= will both work to suppress the newline.

However, this can be very dangerous when writing more advanced scripts when checking the ERRORLEVEL becomes important as setting set /p= without specifying a variable name will set the ERRORLEVEL to 1.

A better approach would be to just use a dummy variable name like so:
echo | set /p dummyName=Hello World

This will produce exactly what you want without any sneaky stuff going on in the background as I had to find out the hard way, but this only works with the piped version; <NUL set /p dummyName=Hello will still raise the ERRORLEVEL to 1.

4
  • 33
    Warning: This command will set ERRORLEVEL to 0. If ERRORLEVEL was greater then 0 it will change ERRORLEVEL to 0. This also can be dangerous when writing more advanced scripts. (but +1 for answer)
    – CoperNick
    May 13, 2014 at 7:42
  • 2
    So you basically need an IF ERRORLEVEL==0 (...) ELSE (...) just to not harm your environment in those circumstances. Sheesh. Sep 22, 2017 at 0:33
  • 4
    well, writing more advanced batch scripts sounds pretty dangerous on its own already :) if not for stable execution, at least risky for the mental state of the writer
    – gilad905
    May 12, 2021 at 16:49
  • I'm not sure is "very dangerous" is the right phrase as it really depends on what the script is for and its potential repercussions. Maybe "this can cause unintended behavior" or something. Jan 27, 2023 at 16:06
33

The simple SET /P method has limitations that vary slightly between Windows versions.

  • Leading quotes may be stripped

  • Leading white space may be stripped

  • Leading = causes a syntax error.

See http://www.dostips.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=4209 for more information.

jeb posted a clever solution that solves most of the problems at Output text without linefeed, even with leading space or = I've refined the method so that it can safely print absolutely any valid batch string without the new line, on any version of Windows from XP onward. Note that the :writeInitialize method contains a string literal that may not post well to the site. A remark is included that describes what the character sequence should be.

The :write and :writeVar methods are optimized such that only strings containing troublesome leading characters are written using my modified version of jeb's COPY method. Non-troublesome strings are written using the simpler and faster SET /P method.

@echo off
setlocal disableDelayedExpansion
call :writeInitialize
call :write "=hello"
call :write " world!%$write.sub%OK!"
echo(
setlocal enableDelayedExpansion
set lf=^


set "str= hello!lf!world^!!!$write.sub!hello!lf!world"
echo(
echo str=!str!
echo(
call :write "str="
call :writeVar str
echo(
exit /b

:write  Str
::
:: Write the literal string Str to stdout without a terminating
:: carriage return or line feed. Enclosing quotes are stripped.
::
:: This routine works by calling :writeVar
::
setlocal disableDelayedExpansion
set "str=%~1"
call :writeVar str
exit /b


:writeVar  StrVar
::
:: Writes the value of variable StrVar to stdout without a terminating
:: carriage return or line feed.
::
:: The routine relies on variables defined by :writeInitialize. If the
:: variables are not yet defined, then it calls :writeInitialize to
:: temporarily define them. Performance can be improved by explicitly
:: calling :writeInitialize once before the first call to :writeVar
::
if not defined %~1 exit /b
setlocal enableDelayedExpansion
if not defined $write.sub call :writeInitialize
set $write.special=1
if "!%~1:~0,1!" equ "^!" set "$write.special="
for /f delims^=^ eol^= %%A in ("!%~1:~0,1!") do (
  if "%%A" neq "=" if "!$write.problemChars:%%A=!" equ "!$write.problemChars!" set "$write.special="
)
if not defined $write.special (
  <nul set /p "=!%~1!"
  exit /b
)
>"%$write.temp%_1.txt" (echo !str!!$write.sub!)
copy "%$write.temp%_1.txt" /a "%$write.temp%_2.txt" /b >nul
type "%$write.temp%_2.txt"
del "%$write.temp%_1.txt" "%$write.temp%_2.txt"
set "str2=!str:*%$write.sub%=%$write.sub%!"
if "!str2!" neq "!str!" <nul set /p "=!str2!"
exit /b


:writeInitialize
::
:: Defines 3 variables needed by the :write and :writeVar routines
::
::   $write.temp - specifies a base path for temporary files
::
::   $write.sub  - contains the SUB character, also known as <CTRL-Z> or 0x1A
::
::   $write.problemChars - list of characters that cause problems for SET /P
::      <carriageReturn> <formFeed> <space> <tab> <0xFF> <equal> <quote>
::      Note that <lineFeed> and <equal> also causes problems, but are handled elsewhere
::
set "$write.temp=%temp%\writeTemp%random%"
copy nul "%$write.temp%.txt" /a >nul
for /f "usebackq" %%A in ("%$write.temp%.txt") do set "$write.sub=%%A"
del "%$write.temp%.txt"
for /f %%A in ('copy /z "%~f0" nul') do for /f %%B in ('cls') do (
  set "$write.problemChars=%%A%%B    ""
  REM the characters after %%B above should be <space> <tab> <0xFF>
)
exit /b
5
  • 2
    Nice to see a very powerful solution that can handle all characters
    – jeb
    Oct 19, 2013 at 17:16
  • 3
    I'd like to point out that if the computer happens to have network connection to the internet that roughly this much of batch code can be used to download and install python or anything else on the computer which can get you rid of batch. Batch is fun however it's string capabilities are best for weekend challange.
    – n611x007
    Jul 9, 2015 at 11:12
  • @dbenham on line 6 "echo(" is that functionally the same as "echo." - not seen that before.
    – Skip R
    Aug 11, 2018 at 2:17
  • 2
    @SkipR - Yes, it is functionally the same as ECHO., except ECHO. can fail under obscure circumstances. There are a bunch of other forms that can also fail in obscure situations. The only one that always works is ECHO(.
    – dbenham
    Aug 11, 2018 at 4:09
  • @dbenham: ECHO( is also failing, it returns errorlevel 9009 (see: Official MS reference for cmd.exe %errorlevel% 9009 on Windows 11)
    – Luuk
    Jun 4, 2023 at 13:09
13

As an addendum to @xmechanix's answer, I noticed through writing the contents to a file:

echo | set /p dummyName=Hello World > somefile.txt

That this will add an extra space at the end of the printed string, which can be inconvenient, specially since we're trying to avoid adding a new line (another whitespace character) to the end of the string.

Fortunately, quoting the string to be printed, i.e. using:

echo | set /p dummyName="Hello World" > somefile.txt

Will print the string without any newline or space character at the end.

8
  • 6
    The extra space should disappear if you don't put a space between World and >...
    – aschipfl
    Jul 23, 2016 at 0:58
  • 1
    @aschipfl Tried it, it doesn't. Jul 25, 2016 at 7:07
  • The Quoted variable Method, an undocumented feature of the set command, is generally how I see it should be approached, as it works in all versions of WIndows NT (and 9x if I recall). That is you wrap the Variable name to the end of the value in quotes. This is true for Set/P as well. Oct 24, 2017 at 14:51
  • 2
    IE: echo | set /p "dummyName=Hello World" >somefile.txt Oct 24, 2017 at 14:51
  • 3
    @aschipfl An extra space will appear if you don't do quotes, and you do a pipe. xxd is a hex dump utility so we see e.g. set /p="abc"<nul|xxd -p displays 616263 whereas set /p=abc<nul|xxd -p gives 61626320
    – barlop
    Mar 10, 2019 at 4:33
11

A solution for the stripped white space in SET /P:

the trick is that backspace char which you can summon in the text editor EDIT for DOS. To create it in EDIT press ctrlP+ctrlH. I would paste it here but this webpage can't display it. It's visible on Notepad though (it's werid, like a small black rectangle with a white circle in the center)

So you write this:

<nul set /p=.9    Hello everyone

The dot can be any char, it's only there to tell SET /P that the text starts there, before the spaces, and not at the "Hello". The "9" is a representation of the backspace char that I can't display here. You have to put it instead of the 9, and it will delete the "." , after which you'll get this:

    Hello Everyone

instead of:

Hello Everyone

I hope it helps

9
  • 2
    I forgot to tell, it works in Windows 7 It won't work in a command line, only in a batch. For anyone not getting the char, download this example: pecm.com.sapo.pt/SET_with_backspace_char.txt
    – Pedro
    Jan 25, 2015 at 21:43
  • Also true for Echo Oct 24, 2017 at 14:55
  • ... So, after doing a pretty damn thorough search I haven't found this ANYWHERE on the net. It might be the one time I've actually discovered something, and by dumb luck. For those who don't know you CAN enter control characters if you put your cmd prompt in legacy mode and use the right font. ... But if you simply redirect anything to a file or >con it works too. Seriously. Paste this EXACTLY into your command prompt: "echo ←c◙◙○○ Harharhar!!◙○○ -------------◙◙○○ I am the worst!?:'(○ ♪○NOPE!•♪○ I feel great! Hazzah-le-oop!◙◙○ I am programmeer hear me ... something.◙>con". Feb 16, 2019 at 3:11
  • Okay, I hope I found this out before anyone else but ... this is seemingly dependent on not being in a unicode code page. You could store the starting one in a variable do chcp 437, set the set in a variable, or output it, and then switch back (and it should still output). I'm playing around with it still. Feb 16, 2019 at 4:32
  • Also, does anyone have any idea why ←c clears the screen?! I can't find an instance of that anywhere on the net. It's specfically that combination, although you seem to be able to have whitespace between the two characters too. For any other character it seems to just.. remove the first character. I don't get it... Feb 16, 2019 at 4:33
8

Here is another method, it uses Powershell Write-Host which has a -NoNewLine parameter, combine that with start /b and it offers the same functionality from batch.

NoNewLines.cmd

@ECHO OFF
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 1 - ';Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 2 - ';Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 3 - '"
PAUSE

Output

Result 1 - Result 2 - Result 3 - Press any key to continue . . .

This one below is slightly different, doesn't work exactly like the OP wants, but is interesting because each result overwrites the previous result emulating a counter.

@ECHO OFF
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 1 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 2 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 3 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 4 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 5 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 6 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 7 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 8 - '"
start /b /wait powershell.exe -command "Write-Host -NoNewLine 'Result 9 - '"
PAUSE
8

I made a function out of @arnep 's idea:

echo|set /p="Hello World"

here it is:

:SL (sameline)
echo|set /p=%1
exit /b

Use it with call :SL "Hello There"
I know this is nothing special but it took me so long to think of it I figured I'd post it here.

7

You can remove the newline using "tr" from gnuwin32 (coreutils package)

@echo off
set L=First line
echo %L% | tr -d "\r\n"
echo Second line
pause

By the way, if you are doing lots of scripting, gnuwin32 is a goldmine.

5
  • I also suggest to install git bash. sure it's not the same as gnuwin32 (and it is a goldmine therefore +1), it's just a nice setup, and you have git-bash on the right mouse button nearly everywhere including the start menu button.
    – hakre
    Jan 26, 2013 at 21:48
  • can you use tr to just remove the last space character, like in trim?
    – panny
    Feb 13, 2013 at 12:50
  • use sed for trim: sed -e "s/ *$//"
    – BearCode
    Mar 5, 2013 at 23:44
  • @panny - I cannot find a posix/linux util called trim. Also, \r, \n or \r\n (New lines in OSX, Posix and Windows respectively) are not "space" characters.
    – user66001
    Jun 3, 2013 at 18:11
  • 1
    If you have gnuwin32 (or git) installed, then you can use printf instead of echo. printf does not emit a line feed by default. May 6, 2022 at 17:29
4

DIY cw.exe (console write) utility

If you don't find it out-of-the-box, off-the-shelf, you can DIY. With this cw utility you can use every kind of characters. At least, I'd like to think so. Please stress-test it and let me know.

Tools

All you need is .NET installed, which is very common nowadays.

Materials

Some characters typed/copy-pasted.

Steps

  1. Create .bat file with the following content.
/* >nul 2>&1

@echo off
setlocal

set exe=cw
for /f "tokens=* delims=" %%v in ('dir /b /s /a:-d  /o:-n "%SystemRoot%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\*csc.exe"') do set "csc=%%v"

"%csc%" -nologo -out:"%exe%.exe" "%~f0"

endlocal
exit /b %errorlevel%

*/

using System;

namespace cw {
    class Program {
        static void Main() {
            var exe = Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()[0];
            var rawCmd = Environment.CommandLine;
            var line = rawCmd.Remove(rawCmd.IndexOf(exe),exe.Length).TrimStart('"');
            line = line.Length < 2 ? "\r" : line.Substring(2) ;
            Console.Write(line);
        }
    }
}
  1. Run it.

  2. Now you have a nice 4KB utility so you can delete the .bat.

Alternatively, you can insert this code as a subroutine in any batch, send the resulting .exe to %temp%, use it in your batch and delete it when you're done.

How to use

If you want write something without new line:
cw Whatever you want, even with "", but remember to escape ^|, ^^, ^&, etc. unless double-quoted, like in "| ^ &".

If you want a carriage return (going to the beginning of the line), run just
cw

So try this from command line:

for /l %a in (1,1,1000) do @(cw ^|&cw&cw /&cw&cw -&cw&cw \&cw)
1
  • I was inspired by your answer and created this little tool with Go and this accompanying task for Azure Pipelines. It just grabs the stdout that is piped in and outputs that in a specific format to be picked up by the build. Thank you!
    – riezebosch
    Nov 14, 2018 at 20:06
3

Sample 1: This works and produces Exit code = 0. That is Good. Note the "." , directly after echo.

C:\Users\phife.dog\gitrepos\1\repo_abc\scripts #
@echo.| set /p JUNK_VAR=This is a message displayed like Linux echo -n would display it ... & echo %ERRORLEVEL%

This is a message displayed like Linux echo -n would display it ... 0

Sample 2: This works but produces Exit code = 1. That is Bad. Please note the lack of ".", after echo. That appears to be the difference.

C:\Users\phife.dog\gitrepos\1\repo_abc\scripts #
@echo | set /p JUNK_VAR=This is a message displayed like Linux echo -n would display it ... & echo %ERRORLEVEL%

This is a message displayed like Linux echo -n would display it ... 1

3

From here

<nul set /p =Testing testing

and also to echo beginning with spaces use

echo.Message goes here
3

Inspired by the answers to this question, I made a simple counter batch script that keeps printing the progress value (0-100%) on the same line (overwritting the previous one). Maybe this will also be valuable to others looking for a similar solution.

Remark: The * are non-printable characters, these should be entered using [Alt + Numpad 0 + Numpad 8] key combination, which is the backspace character.

@ECHO OFF

FOR /L %%A in (0, 10, 100) DO (     
    ECHO|SET /P="****%%A%%"    
    CALL:Wait 1
)

GOTO:EOF

:Wait
SET /A "delay=%~1+1"
CALL PING 127.0.0.1 -n %delay% > NUL
GOTO:EOF
2

Maybe this is what your looking for, it's a old school script... :P

set nl=^& echo. 
echo %nl%The%nl%new%nl%line%nl%is%nl%not%nl%apparent%nl%throughout%nl%text%nl%
echo only in prompt.
pause

or maybe your trying to replace a current line instead of writing to a new line? you can experiment with this by removing the "%bs%" after the "." sign and also by spacing out the other "%bs%" after the "Example message".

for /f %%a in ('"prompt $H&for %%b in (1) do rem"') do set "bs=%%a"
<nul set /p=.%bs%         Example message         %bs%
pause

I find this really interesting because it uses a variable for a purpose other than what it is intended to do. as you can see the "%bs%" represents a backspace. The second "%bs%" uses the backspace to add spaces after the "Example message" to separate the "Pause command's output" without actually adding a visible character after the "Example message". However, this is also possible with a regular percentage sign.

2
  • 3
    I see this set nl=^& echo. trick everywhere and the name of the variable is misleading. %nl% is not a newline character: it expands to &echo. so in the end you are running a new echo command every time, hence the newline. You can check it out writing echo "%nl%The%nl%new%nl%line%nl%is%nl%not%nl%apparent%nl%throughout%nl%text%nl%". You get "& echo. The& echo. new& echo. line& echo. is& echo. not& echo. apparent& echo. throughout& echo. text& echo. ", revealing the trick. The output is the same but not for the reasons you suggest.
    – cdlvcdlv
    Jul 16, 2018 at 9:25
  • not only is the 'trick' annoying, ECHO.xxx is actually parsed as a file before it is executed as a command, so it'll fail if there is a file named ECHO in the current directory. Better is echo(
    – ScriptKidd
    Jul 19, 2020 at 10:30
1

You can suppress the new line by using the set /p command. The set /p command does not recognize a space, for that you can use a dot and a backspace character to make it recognize it. You can also use a variable as a memory and store what you want to print in it, so that you can print the variable instead of the sentence. For example:

@echo off
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
for /f %%a in ('"prompt $H & for %%b in (1) do rem"') do (set "bs=%%a")
cls
set "var=Hello World! :)"
set "x=0"

:loop
set "display=!var:~%x%,1!"
<nul set /p "print=.%bs%%display%"
ping -n 1 localhost >nul
set /a "x=%x% + 1"
if "!var:~%x%,1!" == "" goto end
goto loop

:end
echo.
pause
exit

In this way you can print anything without a new line. I have made the program to print the characters one by one, but you can use words too instead of characters by changing the loop.

In the above example I used "enabledelayedexpansion" so the set /p command does not recognize "!" character and prints a dot instead of that. I hope that you don't have the use of the exclamation mark "!" ;)

1

Use EchoX.EXE from the terrific "Shell Scripting Toolkit" by Bill Stewart
How to suppress the linefeed in a Windows Cmd script:

@Echo Off
Rem Print three Echos in one line of output
EchoX -n "Part 1 - "
EchoX -n "Part 2 - "
EchoX    "Part 3"
Rem

gives:

Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3
{empty line}
d:\Prompt>

The help for this usage is:

Usage: echox [-n] message
  -n       Do not skip to the next line.
  message  The text to be displayed.

The utility is smaller than 48K, and should live in your Path. More things it can do:
- print text without moving to the next line
- print text justified to the left, center, or right, within a certain width
- print text with Tabs, Linefeeds, and Returns
- print text in foreground and background colors

The Toolkit includes twelve more great scripting tricks.
The download page also hosts three other useful tool packages.

1

I found this simple one-line batch file called "EchoPart.bat" to be quite useful.

@echo | set /p=%*

I could then write something like the line below even on an interactive CMD line, or as part of a shortcut. It opens up a few new possibilities.

echopart "Hello, " & echopart "and then " & echo Goodbye

enter image description here

And if you're using it in batch files, the texts can be got from parameter variables instead of immutable strings. For instance:

@echopart Hello %* & @echo , how are you?

So that executing this line in "SayHello.bat" allows:

enter image description here

or even...

enter image description here

Have a play, and have fun!

2
  • I know the batch file line "@echo Hello %*, how are you?" would do the same, but the point about "EchoPart.bat" is that it outputs its text without adding a linefeed. This means that you can concatenate texts much like the "cat" command in BASH. Although you wouldn't have to pipe the commands, merely execute them sequentially. In my example tests I ended with a straight echo, but I could have ended with another echoPart.
    – Alex T
    Aug 16, 2021 at 15:09
  • Compare for instance the command lines "dir" and "echopart Local &dir". Spot the difference?
    – Alex T
    Aug 16, 2021 at 15:17
0

I believe there's no such option. Alternatively you can try this

set text=Hello
set text=%text% world
echo %text%
5
  • 6
    This will still print a newline. Aug 18, 2011 at 10:18
  • 5
    You can concatenate on the same variable as much as you want and only echo at the very end.
    – m0skit0
    Aug 18, 2011 at 10:24
  • 3
    Printing it when doing the loop or at the end doesn't matter if the data is preserved. For each loop you just concatenate the data, and then when loop is finished you print it. The result is the same.
    – m0skit0
    Aug 18, 2011 at 12:02
  • 10
    It does matter if it's an indicator of the progression of the loop.
    – gregseth
    Aug 18, 2011 at 14:50
  • 3
    You never stated that in your question or requested this behavior anywhere in your question.
    – m0skit0
    Nov 20, 2012 at 16:17
0

Echo with preceding space and without newline

As stated by Pedro earlier, echo without new line and with preceding space works (provided "9" is a true [BackSpace]).

<nul set /p=.9    Hello everyone

I had some issues getting it to work in Windows 10 with the new console but managed the following way.
In CMD type:

echo .◘>bs.txt

I got "◘" by pressing [Alt] + [8]
(the actual symbol may vary depending upon codepage).

Then it's easy to copy the result from "bs.txt" using Notepad.exe to where it's needed.

@echo off
<nul set /p "_s=.◘    Hello everyone"
echo: here
0

With jscript:

@if (@X)==(@Y) @end /*
    @cscript //E:JScript //nologo "%~nx0" %*
    @exit /b %errorlevel%
*/if(WScript.Arguments.Count()>0) WScript.StdOut.Write(WScript.Arguments.Item(0));

if it is called write.bat you can test it like:

call write.bat string & echo _Another_String_

If you want to use powershell but with cmd defined variables you can use:

set str=_My_StrinG_
powershell "Write-Host -NoNewline ""%str%""""  & echo #Another#STRING#
-1

Late answer here, but for anyone who needs to write special characters to a single line who find dbenham's answer to be about 80 lines too long and whose scripts may break (perhaps due to user-input) under the limitations of simply using set /p, it's probably easiest to just to pair your .bat or .cmd with a compiled C++ or C-language executable and then just cout or printf the characters. This will also allow you to easily write multiple times to one line if you're showing a sort of progress bar or something using characters, as OP apparently was.

5
  • @jiggunjer You sure? printfing from a Win-7 cmd pane gives me "'printf' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file." Sep 2, 2016 at 18:03
  • printf is not native to windows. This is a windows question. Sep 29, 2016 at 17:57
  • 1
    @kayleeFrye_onDeck I assume your comment is directed at jiggunjer, not me; I suggest in my question that C and C++ might be used as a fairly platform-independent alternative to shell commands in cases where formatting is important. Sep 29, 2016 at 22:34
  • 1
    Forgive me father, for I have skimmed. Sep 30, 2016 at 0:24
  • But then the input to the shell needs to be parsed correctly. For example, how would such a program print a quotation mark?
    – Alex
    Mar 20, 2017 at 22:06

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