50

I have the following line in a batch file (that runs on an old Windows 2000 box):

7z a QuickBackup.zip *.backup

How do I append the date to the QuickBackup.zip file. So if I ran the batch file today, ideally, the file would be QuickBackup20090514.zip.

Is there a way to do this?

2
  • 2
    Since some of the answers use the %DATE% environment variable, you might want to let us know the "Short date format" that is configured on your system in the "Regional Options" Control Panel. May 14, 2009 at 17:57
  • 2
    An approach that is independent of Regional Options is in an answer to Batch command date and time in file name - based on the system command wmic os get localdatetime /format:list. Sample output from wmic is: LocalDateTime=20140619215423.218000+120 Jun 19, 2014 at 19:50

14 Answers 14

62

Bernhard's answer needed some tweaking work for me because the %DATE% environment variable is in a different format (as commented elsewhere). Also, there was a tilde (~) missing.

Instead of:

set backupFilename=%DATE:~6,4%%DATE:~3,2%%DATE:0,2%

I had to use:

set backupFilename=%DATE:~10,4%%DATE:~4,2%%DATE:~7,2%

for the date format:

c:\Scripts>echo %DATE%

Thu 05/14/2009

5
  • Thanks, I tweaked my file exact same way, the I saw your answer. May 16, 2009 at 4:14
  • 6
    Chris, you're missing the tilde in the day-of-the-month It should be: set backupFilename=%DATE:~6,4%%DATE:~3,2%%DATE:~0,2%
    – Glenn Wark
    Dec 9, 2009 at 17:30
  • To parse this format in the UK / EU / AUS order I used set today=%DATE:~10,4%%DATE:~7,2%%DATE:~4,2%
    – CAD bloke
    Nov 16, 2012 at 1:24
  • 5
    This will not work across different machines as they may have differing date formats.
    – Simon E.
    Nov 13, 2015 at 4:58
  • 1
    This worked perfect for me, thank you. Like you, the original answer didn't work. I learned something about manipulating environment variables in a command window!
    – Mmm
    Jan 13, 2016 at 3:26
15

This will work for the non-US date format (dd/MM/yyyy):

set backupFilename=%DATE:~6,4%%DATE:~3,2%%DATE:~0,2%
7z a QuickBackup%backupFilename%.zip *.backup
14
@SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION

@REM Use WMIC to retrieve date and time
@echo off
FOR /F "skip=1 tokens=1-6" %%A IN ('WMIC Path Win32_LocalTime Get Day^,Hour^,Minute^,Month^,Second^,Year /Format:table') DO (
    IF NOT "%%~F"=="" (
        SET /A SortDate = 10000 * %%F + 100 * %%D + %%A
        set YEAR=!SortDate:~0,4!
        set MON=!SortDate:~4,2!
        set DAY=!SortDate:~6,2!
        @REM Add 1000000 so as to force a prepended 0 if hours less than 10
        SET /A SortTime = 1000000 + 10000 * %%B + 100 * %%C + %%E
        set HOUR=!SortTime:~1,2!
        set MIN=!SortTime:~3,2!
        set SEC=!SortTime:~5,2!
    )
)
@echo on
@echo DATE=%DATE%, TIME=%TIME%
@echo HOUR=!HOUR! MIN=!MIN! SEC=!SEC!
@echo YR=!YEAR! MON=!MON! DAY=!DAY! 
@echo DATECODE= '!YEAR!!MON!!DAY!!HOUR!!MIN!' 

Output:

DATE=2015-05-20, TIME= 1:30:38.59
HOUR=01 MIN=30 SEC=38
YR=2015 MON=05 DAY=20
DATECODE= '201505200130'
1
  • 1
    This should be the accepted answer, as it is truly locale-independent! Jun 6, 2017 at 23:12
13

If you know your regional settings won't change you can do it as follows:

  • if your short date format is dd/MM/yyyy:

    SET MYDATE=%DATE:~3,2%%DATE:~0,2%%DATE:~8,4%

  • if your short date format is MM/dd/yyyy:

    SET MYDATE=%DATE:~0,2%%DATE:~3,2%%DATE:~8,4%

But there's no general way to do it that's independent of your regional settings.

I would not recommend relying on regional settings for anything that's going to be used in a production environment. Instead you should consider using another scripting language - PowerShell, VBScript, ...

For example, if you create a VBS file yyyymmdd.vbs in the same directory as your batch file with the following contents:

' yyyymmdd.vbs - outputs the current date in the format yyyymmdd
Function Pad(Value, PadCharacter, Length)
    Pad = Right(String(Length,PadCharacter) & Value, Length)
End Function

Dim Today
Today = Date
WScript.Echo Pad(Year(Today), "0", 4) & Pad(Month(Today), "0", 2) & Pad(Day(Today), "0", 2)

then you will be able to call it from your batch file thus:

FOR /F %%i IN ('cscript "%~dp0yyyymmdd.vbs" //Nologo') do SET MYDATE=%%i
echo %MYDATE%

Of course there will eventually come a point where rewriting your batch file in a more powerful scripting language will make more sense than mixing it with VBScript in this way.

1
  • The second command is close, but I was able to build off of it. Thanks!!
    – Monster
    May 27, 2009 at 13:35
7

You can also access the date via the variable %DATE%

When testing my system %DATE% produces ddd dd/mm/yyyy

you can use substring operators to produce the format you desire

ie. running the following on MON 11/12/2018 with US regional settings

%DATE:~3,3% %DATE:~0,3% %DATE:~7,2%

Will produce an output:

11 Mon 12

the substring arguments are
%*variable*:~*startpos*,*numberofchars*%

you can read more about bat variable substrings here https://ss64.com/nt/syntax-substring.html

2
  • That character vomit in the code sections looks exactly like the code I inherited. Would anyone perhaps have a URL to a manual that explains the numbers following %date:... I have a real trouble figuring the right search terms for it.
    – Torben
    Jan 9, 2023 at 11:01
  • 1
    this was my source.. ss64.com/nt/syntax-substring.html
    – ShoeLace
    May 17, 2023 at 6:28
4

This is all awkward and not local settings independent. Do it like this:

%CYGWIN_DIR%\bin\date +%%Y%%m%%d_%%H%%M% > date.txt
for /f "delims=" %%a in ('type "date.txt" 2^>NUL') do set datetime=%%a
echo %datetime%
del date.txt

Yes, use Cygwin date and all your problems are gone!

2

Sure.

FOR %%A IN (%Date:/=%) DO SET Today=%%A
7z a QuickBackup%TODAY%.zip *.backup

That is DDMMYYYY format.

Here's YYYYDDMM:

FOR %%A IN (%Date%) DO (
    FOR /F "tokens=1-3 delims=/-" %%B in ("%%~A") DO (
        SET Today=%%D%%B%%C
    )
)
7z a QuickBackup%TODAY%.zip *.backup
1
  • 3
    If these don't work, check the "Regional and Language Options" Control Panel. The date format of %Date% is dependent on the regional settings. May 14, 2009 at 17:55
2

There is a tech recipe available here that shows how to format it to MMDDYYYY, you should be able to adapt it for your needs.

echo on
@REM Seamonkey’s quick date batch (MMDDYYYY format)
@REM Setups %date variable
@REM First parses month, day, and year into mm , dd, yyyy formats and then combines to be MMDDYYYY
FOR /F "TOKENS=1* DELIMS= " %%A IN ('DATE/T') DO SET CDATE=%%B
FOR /F "TOKENS=1,2 eol=/ DELIMS=/ " %%A IN ('DATE/T') DO SET mm=%%B
FOR /F "TOKENS=1,2 DELIMS=/ eol=/" %%A IN ('echo %CDATE%') DO SET dd=%%B
FOR /F "TOKENS=2,3 DELIMS=/ " %%A IN ('echo %CDATE%') DO SET yyyy=%%B
SET date=%mm%%dd%%yyyy%

echo %date%

EDIT: The reason did not work before was because of 'smartquotes' in the original text. I fixed them and the batch file will work if cut & pasted from this page.

1
  • Ah, next time I'll test it properly before linking to another source. The reason the tech-recipe did not work was because of special quote characters in the webpage. I updated it and it works now. May 27, 2009 at 13:43
1

I've used the environment variables technique covered here: http://cwashington.netreach.net/depo/view.asp?Index=19

http://cwashington.netreach.net/depo/default.asp?topic=repository&move=last&ScriptType=command&SubType=Misc

Here's the code from that site:

::~~Author~~.          Brett Middleton
::~~Email_Address~~. [email protected]
::~~Script_Type~~.   nt command line batch
::~~Sub_Type~~. Misc
::~~Keywords~~. environment variables

::~~Comment~~.
::Sets or clears a group of environment variables containing components of the current date extracted from the string returned by the DATE /T command.  These variables can be used to name files, control the flow of execution, etc.

::~~Script~~.

@echo off

::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  SetEnvDate1.CMD                                                     6/30/98
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  Description  :  Sets or clears a group of environment variables containing
::               :  components of the current date extracted from the string
::               :  returned by the DATE /T command.  These variables can be
::               :  used to name files, control the flow of execution, etc.
::               :
::  Requires     :  Windows NT with command extensions enabled
::               :
::  Tested       :  Yes, as demonstration
::               :
::  Contact      :  Brett Middleton <[email protected]>
::               :  Animal and Dairy Science Department
::               :  University of Georgia, Athens
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  USAGE
::
::  SetEnvDate1 can be used as a model for coding date/time routines in
::  other scripts, or can be used by itself as a utility that is called
::  from other scripts.
::  
::  Run or call SetEnvDate1 without arguments to set the date variables.
::  Variables are set for the day abbreviation (DT_DAY), month number (DT_MM),
::  day number (DT_DD) and four-digit year (DT_YYYY).
::
::  When the variables are no longer needed, clean up the environment by
::  calling the script again with the CLEAR argument.  E.g.,
::
::       call SetEnvDate1 clear
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  NOTES
::
::  A time variable could be added by parsing the string returned by the
::  built-in TIME /T command.  This is left as an exercise for the reader. B-)
::
::  This script illustrates the following NT command extensions:
::
::  1.  Use of the extended IF command to do case-insensitive comparisons.
::
::  2.  Use of the extended DATE command.
::
::  3.  Use of the extended FOR command to parse a string returned by a
::      command or program.
::
::  4.  Use of the "()" conditional processing symbols to group commands
::      for conditional execution.  All commands between the parens will
::      be executed if the preceeding IF or FOR statement is TRUE.
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

if not "%1" == "?" goto chkarg
echo.
echo Sets or clears date/time variables in the command environment.
echo.
echo    SetEnvDate1 [clear]
echo.
echo When called without arguments, the variables are created or updated.
echo When called with the CLEAR argument, the variables are deleted.
echo.
goto endit

::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  Check arguments and select SET or CLEAR routine.  Unrecognized arguments
::  are ignored and SET is assumed.
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

:chkarg

if /I "%1" == "CLEAR" goto clrvar
goto setvar

::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  Set variables for the day abbreviation (DAY), month number (MM), 
::  day number (DD) and 4-digit year (YYYY). 
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

:setvar

for /F "tokens=1-4 delims=/ " %%i IN ('date /t') DO (
set DT_DAY=%%i
set DT_MM=%%j
set DT_DD=%%k
set DT_YYYY=%%l)

goto endit

::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
::  Clear all variables from the environment.
::-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

:clrvar
for %%v in (DT_DAY DT_MM DT_DD DT_YYYY) do set %%v=
goto endit

:endit
1
  • Both links (on cwashington.netreach.net) seems to be broken now. Can you fix the links or do you have some of the content such that it can searched for? Sep 25, 2009 at 9:58
1

As has been noted, parsing the date and time is only useful if you know the format being used by the current user (eg. MM/dd/yy or dd-MM-yyyy just to name 2). This could be determined, but by the time you do all the stressing and parsing, you will still end up with some situation where there is an unexpected format used, and more tweaks will be be necessary.

You can also use some external program that will return a date slug in your preferred format, but that has disadvantages of needing to distribute the utility program with your script/batch.

there are also batch tricks using the CMOS clock in a pretty raw way, but that is tooo close to bare wires for most people, and also not always the preferred place to retrieve the date/time.

Below is a solution that avoids the above problems. Yes, it introduces some other issues, but for my purposes I found this to be the easiest, clearest, most portable solution for creating a datestamp in .bat files for modern Windows systems. This is just an example, but I think you will see how to modify for other date and/or time formats, etc.

reg copy "HKCU\Control Panel\International" "HKCU\Control Panel\International-Temp" /f
reg add "HKCU\Control Panel\International" /v sShortDate /d "yyMMdd" /f
@REM the following may be needed to be sure cache is clear before using the new setting
reg query "HKCU\Control Panel\International" /v sShortDate
set LogDate=%date%
reg copy "HKCU\Control Panel\International-Temp" "HKCU\Control Panel\International" /f
1

Building on Joe's idea, here is a version which will build its own (.js) helper and supporting time as well:

@echo off

set _TMP=%TEMP%\_datetime.tmp

echo var date = new Date(), string, tmp;> "%_TMP%"
echo tmp = ^"000^" + date.getFullYear(); string = tmp.substr(tmp.length - 4);>> "%_TMP%"
echo tmp = ^"0^" + (date.getMonth() + 1); string += tmp.substr(tmp.length - 2);>> "%_TMP%"
echo tmp = ^"0^" + date.getDate(); string += tmp.substr(tmp.length - 2);>> "%_TMP%"
echo tmp = ^"0^" + date.getHours(); string += tmp.substr(tmp.length - 2);>> "%_TMP%"
echo tmp = ^"0^" + date.getMinutes(); string += tmp.substr(tmp.length - 2);>> "%_TMP%"
echo tmp = ^"0^" + date.getSeconds(); string += tmp.substr(tmp.length - 2);>> "%_TMP%"
echo WScript.Echo(string);>> "%_TMP%"

for /f %%i in ('cscript //nologo /e:jscript "%_TMP%"') do set _DATETIME=%%i

del "%_TMP%"

echo YYYYMMDDhhmmss: %_DATETIME%
echo YYYY: %_DATETIME:~0,4%
echo YYYYMM: %_DATETIME:~0,6%
echo YYYYMMDD: %_DATETIME:~0,8%
echo hhmm: %_DATETIME:~8,4%
echo hhmmss: %_DATETIME:~8,6%
1

Sairam With the samples given above, I have tried & came out with the script which I wanted. The position parameters mentioned in other example gave different results. I wanted to create one Batch file to take the Oracle data backup (export data) on daily basis, preserving distinct DMP files with date & time as part of file name. Here is the script which worked well:

cls
set dt=%date:~0,2%%date:~3,2%%date:~6,4%-%time:~0,2%%time:~3,2%
set fn=backup-%dt%.DMP
echo %fn%
pause A
exp user/password file=D:\DATA_DMP\%fn%
1
  • cls set dt=%date:~0,2%%date:~3,2%%date:~6,4%-%time:~0,2%%time:~3,2% set fn=backup-%dt%.DMP echo %fn% pause A exp user/password file=D:\DATA_DMP\%fn% Udayasankar/+91 9497648572 Jan 31, 2017 at 10:06
1

If you have WSL enabled (Windows 10 only) you can do it with bash in a locale neutral way.

set dateFile=%TEMP%\currentDate.txt
bash -c "date +%Y%m%d" > %dateFile%
set /p today=<%dateFile%

Feel free to replace the file redirection with a "for" loop abomination suggested in other answers here and over at Windows batch assign output of a program to a variable

0

I've found two ways that work regardless of the date settings.

On my pc, date/t returns 2009-05-27

You can either access the registry and read the regional settings (HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\International)

Or use a vbscript. This is the ugly batch file/vbscript hybrid I created some time ago....

@Echo Off
set rnd=%Random%
set randfilename=x%rnd%.vbs

::create temp vbscript file
Echo Dim DayofWeek(7) >  %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(1)="Sun" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(2)="Mon" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(3)="Tue" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(4)="Wed" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(5)="Thu" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(6)="Fri" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(7)="Sat" >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo DayofWeek(0)=DayofWeek(Weekday(now)) >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo Mon=Left(MonthName(Month(now),1),3) >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo MonNumeric=right ( "00" ^& Month(now) , 2) >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo wscript.echo ( Year(Now) ^& " " ^& MonNumeric ^& " " ^& Mon ^& " "  _ >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo ^& right("00" ^& Day(now),2) ^& " "^& dayofweek(0) ^& " "^& _ >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo right("00" ^& Hour(now),2)) _ >> %temp%\%randfilename%
Echo ^&":"^& Right("00" ^& Minute(now),2) ^&":"^& Right("00" ^& Second(Now),2)  >> %temp%\%randfilename%

::set the output into vars
if "%1" == "" FOR /f "usebackq tokens=1,2,3,4,5,6" %%A in (`start /wait /b cscript //nologo %temp%\%randfilename%`) do Set Y2KYear=%%A& Set MonthNumeric=%%B& Set Month=%%C& Set Day=%%D& Set DayofWeek=%%E& Set Time=%%F
set year=%y2kyear:~2,2%

::cleanup
del %temp%\%randfilename%

It's not pretty, but it works.

1
  • "date /t" does not work regardless of the date settings. It depends on the "Short date format" in regional settings. E.g. if it is set to "dd-MM-yyyy" then "date /t" returns e.g. "25-09-2009". Sep 25, 2009 at 10:58

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