How do you redirect output in Windows using C?
I tried doing "./echo > myfile.txt", but it wouldn't work.
Great Info here: http://www.robvanderwoude.com/redirection.php
Short Extract:
command > file
| Write standard output of command to file
command 1> file
| Write standard output of command to file (same as previous)
command 2> file
| Write standard error of command to file (OS/2 and NT)
command > file 2>&1
| Write both standard output and standard error of command to file (OS/2 and NT)
command >> file
| Append standard output of command to file
command 1>> file
| Append standard output of command to file (same as previous)
command 2>> file
| Append standard error of command to file (OS/2 and NT)
command >> file 2>&1
| Append both standard output and standard error of command to file (OS/2 and NT)
commandA | commandB
| Redirect standard output of commandA to standard input of commandB
commandA 2>&1 | commandB
| Redirect standard output and standard error of commandA to standard input of commandB (OS/2 and NT)
command < file
| command gets standard input from file
command 2>&1
| command's standard error is redirected to standard output (OS/2 and NT)
command 1>&2
| command's standard output is redirected to standard error (OS/2 and NT)
Ps. No need for slashes...
Just use
echo.exe > myfile.txt
and
echo.exe >> myfile.txt
to append to file
considering echo.exe
is your executable
echo
command with no arguments will simply add a newline to the end of the file.
Sep 8, 2013 at 19:43
echo
is hardly a MS-DOS command unless the OP is using Windows 98. All consumer versions of Windows since XP are based on the NT kernel which doesn't descend from MS-DOS, it merely reimplements some of its shell environment in cmd.exe
. (Wiki tells me that for example the deltree
command was removed and replaced with a flag for rd
.) COMMAND.COM
doesn't exist either, it's just an alias for cmd.exe
which is also a different beast altogether.
Sep 8, 2013 at 19:57
It is the wrong slash for a Windows command shell. The OP used /
, and they should have used \
.
Use .\echo > myfile.txt
./echo
would run theecho
command in the current directory. (On Windows.\programname
would be more appropriate but I think either slash works. Maybe.) To run the global one from the path, just useecho > ...
.echo
utility. Else I fail to see where C would come in at all..