106

I use Windows.

I want to delete all files and folders in a folder by system call.

I may call like that:

>rd /s /q c:\destination
>md c:\destination

Do you know an easier way?

2

12 Answers 12

160

No, I don't know one.

If you want to retain the original directory for some reason (ACLs, &c.), and instead really want to empty it, then you can do the following:

del /q destination\*
for /d %x in (destination\*) do @rd /s /q "%x"

This first removes all files from the directory, and then recursively removes all nested directories, but overall keeping the top-level directory as it is (except for its contents).

Note that within a batch file you need to double the % within the for loop:

del /q destination\*
for /d %%x in (destination\*) do @rd /s /q "%%x"
12
  • 3
    i was able to do this without a batch file. use the && to concat the two operations Oct 19, 2012 at 15:58
  • 1
    I am a complete windows-shell noob: how do i set the destination to a path with this example?
    – low_rents
    Jan 19, 2015 at 11:31
  • You replace the word destination by the path, possibly using quotes around the whole thing if necessary.
    – Joey
    Jan 19, 2015 at 15:24
  • 6
    This answer makes me sad, because it is the best answer
    – KCD
    Mar 8, 2016 at 21:14
  • 1
    @stenci: The second line can only delete the given directory. It does so recursively, indeed, but it cannot delete a file. Therefore, to remove everything inside a directory you have to remove all files, and all directories. Note that this is not about deleting a single directory and everything within. It's about deleting everything within and keeping the parent directory.
    – Joey
    Jun 22, 2016 at 19:10
43

del c:\destination\*.* /s /q worked for me. I hope that works for you as well.

5
  • 15
    Deletes all the files but not the folders.
    – Eric Rini
    Feb 6, 2013 at 16:30
  • 2
    What worked for me was navigate to the folder. (shift right click, select open cmd prompt here) then del *.* Jul 20, 2017 at 18:21
  • example for relative path del "../../server/front-end\*.*" Apr 30, 2018 at 4:57
  • @DanielL.VanDenBosch, that's not very scriptable.
    – Synetech
    Feb 17, 2020 at 21:29
  • The *.* mask used will skip files that do not have an extension. For example makefile. Mask must be used *. May 3, 2022 at 21:41
35

I think the easiest way to do it is:

rmdir /s /q "C:\FolderToDelete\"

The last "" in the path is the important part.

This deletes the folder itself. To retain, add mkdir "C:\FolderToDelete\" to your script.

5
  • 31
    This also deletes the folder itself.
    – Archie
    Nov 20, 2014 at 14:12
  • Does this works recursively what is the path it too long?
    – eomeroff
    Jun 29, 2016 at 13:38
  • This seems to be the best answer, since it deletes the folders & files recursively
    – sunil
    Apr 12, 2017 at 6:00
  • 3
    combining this with mkdir C:\FolderToNotToDelete was enough for me :)
    – qbolec
    Apr 10, 2018 at 9:00
  • 3
    This can be problematic if your parent folder (which gets deleted this way) holds some important permissions, which you now need to recreate...
    – Mladen B.
    Mar 14, 2019 at 8:50
18

Yes! Use Powershell:

powershell -Command "Remove-Item 'c:\destination\*' -Recurse -Force"
0
14

If the subfolder names may contain spaces you need to surround them in escaped quotes. The following example shows this for commands used in a batch file.

set targetdir=c:\example
del /q %targetdir%\*
for /d %%x in (%targetdir%\*) do @rd /s /q ^"%%x^"
8

To delete file:

del PATH_TO_FILE

To delete folder with all files in it:

rmdir /s /q PATH_TO_FOLDER

To delete all files from specific folder (not deleting folder itself) is a little bit complicated. del /s *.* cannot delete folders, but removes files from all subfolder. So two commands are needed:

del /q PATH_TO_FOLDER\*.*
for /d %i in (PATH_TO_FOLDER\*.*) do @rmdir /s /q "%i"

You can create a script to delete whatever you want (folder or file) like this mydel.bat:

@echo off
setlocal enableextensions

if "%~1"=="" (
    echo Usage: %0 path
    exit /b 1
)

:: check whether it is folder or file
set ISDIR=0
set ATTR=%~a1
set DIRATTR=%ATTR:~0,1%
if /i "%DIRATTR%"=="d" set ISDIR=1

:: Delete folder or file
if %ISDIR%==1 (rmdir /s /q "%~1") else (del "%~1")
exit /b %ERRORLEVEL%

Few example of usage:

mydel.bat "path\to\folder with spaces"
mydel.bat path\to\file_or_folder
1

One easy one-line option is to create an empty directory somewhere on your file system, and then use ROBOCOPY (http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc733145.aspx) with the /MIR switch to remove all files and subfolders. By default, robocopy does not copy security, so the ACLs in your root folder should remain intact.

Also probably want to set a value for the retry switch, /r, because the default number of retries is 1 million.

robocopy "C:\DoNotDelete_UsedByScripts\EmptyFolder" "c:\temp\MyDirectoryToEmpty" /MIR /r:3
0

I had an index folder with 33 folders that needed all the files and subfolders removed in them. I opened a command line in the index folder and then used these commands:

for /d in (*) do rd /s /q "%a" & (
md "%a")

I separated them into two lines (hit enter after first line, and when asked for more add second line) because if entered on a single line this may not work. This command will erase each directory and then create a new one which is empty, thus removing all files and subflolders in the original directory.

0
0

Navigate to the parent directory

Line1 pushd "Parent Directory"

Delete the sub folders

Line2 rd /s /q . 2>nul

https://superuser.com/questions/173859/how-can-i-delete-all-files-subfolders-in-a-given-folder-via-the-command-prompt

1
  • 1
    If you use pushd you have to use popd too. Unfortunately, popd does not work when you delete the directory. So, you have to do cd instead of pushd.
    – xmedeko
    Apr 23, 2017 at 17:31
0

It takes 2 simple steps. [/q means quiet, /f means forced, /s means subdir]

  1. Empty out the directory to remove

    del *.* /f/s/q  
    
  2. Remove the directory

    cd ..
    rmdir dir_name /q/s
    

See picture

1
  • what if you just want to remove the contents and not the entire directory? Mar 10, 2022 at 16:59
0

try this, this will search all MyFolder under root dir and delete all folders named MyFolder

for /d /r "C:\Users\test" %%a in (MyFolder\) do if exist "%%a" rmdir /s /q "%%a"
-1
del .\*

This Command delete all files & folders from current navigation in your command line.

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