0

I want to create a batch script to move my files to their respective folder according to their ID.

example:

file name E:\folderPath\Pre001Post.csv, will move to folder E:\folderPath\M001\

001 is the ID, the 'Pre' and 'Post' was random, 2 zero was leading for number less that 10.

file name E:\folderPath\Pre099Post.csv, will move to folder E:\folderPath\M099\

099 is the ID, the 'Pre' and 'Post' was random, 1 zero was leading for number less that 100.

file name E:\folderPath\Pre109Post.csv, will move to folder E:\folderPath\M109\

109 is the ID, the 'Pre' and 'Post' was random.

below was my script,

    @setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
    for /l %%S in (1, 1, 111) do (
         IF %%S LSS 10 ( SET z=00%%S ) ELSE (goto:moveFileProcess)
         IF %%S LSS 100 ( SET z=0%%S ) ELSE (goto:moveFileProcess)
    :moveFileProcess
         echo !z!
         echo %z%
    MOVE /Y E:\folderPath\???%z%????.csv E:\folderPath\M%z%\
    )

The problem was I not able set the variable %%s value to variable z (with the 00 leading).

I was follow Windows Batch files: what is variable expansion, and what does EnableDelayedExpansion mean? to add the @setlocal enabledelayedexpansion, but its still fail. Anyone know which part I was wrong?

1
  • 1
    Well, you are already using delayed expansion when echoing echo !z!, so why not using it in the move command line also??
    – aschipfl
    Jun 4, 2019 at 11:50

1 Answer 1

3

sorry, no labels and no goto allowed in a loop (except to jump out of the loop on a certain condition).

I rewrote your script a bit. You forgot to delay-expand z in the move command, and I implemented another way for your counter:

@setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
for /l %%S in (1001, 1, 1111) do (
   set "z=%%S"
   set "z=!z:~-3!"
   ECHO MOVE /Y "E:\folderPath\???!z!????.csv" "E:\folderPath\M!z!\"
)

Remove the ECHO command after troubleshooting / verifying it does what you want.

2
  • You could also use set "z=!z:~1!" to pointlessly save a character! You could also not add the intermediate set command and do the expansion directly, MOVE /Y "E:\folderPath\???!z:~1!????.csv" "E:\folderPath\M!z:~1!".
    – Compo
    Jun 4, 2019 at 12:02
  • @YHTAN, additionally, "E:\folderPath\???!z!??.csv" should also work because of the greedy nature of using the ? wildcard, (this still assumes three characters before the three digit number). However, please note that the wildcard would also move "E:\folderPath\Pre099.csv", so be careful that you do not have filenames which may be picked up accidentally. Also, for the answer above to work, you would need to already have subdirectories 001..100 existing, (this does not create none existing ones as RoboCopy can).
    – Compo
    Jun 4, 2019 at 13:35

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.