I am wondering if it is possible to change CMD's window title to /?
I've tried using ^/?
, ^/^?
, and "/?"
but none of them seem to work.
Anyone got any suggestions?
Thanks
It's possible with adding some invisible characters.
The idea is taken from @npocmaka SO: How can I set set a title that start with coma,semicolon or equal sign?
The problem of a title with a starting comma it can be solved also with a LF character, but in your case the LF doesn't help anywhere in the string.
@echo off
(set LF=^
%=empty=%
)
::Create a FS variable
call :hexprint "0x1C" FS
title /%FS%?
exit /b
:hexPrint string [rtnVar]
for /f eol^=^%LF%%LF%^ delims^= %%A in (
'forfiles /p "%~dp0." /m "%~nx0" /c "cmd /c echo(%~1"'
) do if "%~2" neq "" (set %~2=%%A) else echo(%%A
exit /b
@ECHO OFF
if "%~1"=="_SO42546112_" (
shift
) else (
start "/?" cmd /D /K ""%~f0" "_SO42546112_""
exit
)
To launch a new CMD
command prompt with /?
window title, double click above .bat
script.
To run a .bat
script with /?
window title, use above concept e.g. as follows:
@ECHO OFF
SETLOCAL EnableExtensions
rem self wrapper - start
if "%~1"=="_SO42546112_" (
shift
) else (
start "/?" cmd /D /C ""%~f0" "_SO42546112_" %*"
exit /B
rem ↑↑ omit the `/B` switch to close calling `cmd` window
)
rem self wrapper - end
rem check whether the self wrapper works - start
echo 1st "%~1"
echo 2nd "%~2"
echo 3rd "%~3"
echo all %*
pause
rem check whether the self wrapper works - end
rem original script continues here:
title "/?"
works for me. Edit: oops just realized that it displays"/?"
with quotes[System.Console]::Title = "/?"
will just work, but if we call powershell from cmd it'll start a subshell so we can't keep the old environmentstart "/?"
it opens another CMD window with the correct title of/?
. Unfortunately, this needs to open another window, and it can't just be changed on the fly.title = ^/?
,title = "/?"
... either