31

In this command:

FOR /F %%A IN ('TYPE "%InFile%"^|find /v /c ""')DO SET "Till=%%A"

what does the ^ mean?

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4 Answers 4

29

The caret '^' character serves two purposes in Windows batch files:

1. line continuations:

~~~

@echo off

dir ^
/ad ^
c:\temp

~~~~

results in dir /ad c:\temp, which lists only the directories in C:\temp.

2. Escaping reserved shell characters & | ( < > ^.

Use a preceding caret to escape and print the character:

echo this pipe will print ^| but this one won't |
echo and this will print one caret ^^
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  • 3
    1 - Line continuation is a special case of the 2 - general escape next character behavior. If the character following a ^ is a newline, then the newline is stripped, and the subsequent character is escaped.
    – dbenham
    Oct 17, 2020 at 14:04
25

The ^ symbol (also called caret or circumflex) is an escape character in Batch script. When it is used, the next character is interpreted as an ordinary character.

In your script, the output of the TYPE command to be written as the input to the FIND command.
If you don't use the escape character ^ before the |, then the regular meaning of | is a pipe character.

The Documentation says:

To display a pipe (|) or redirection character (< or >) when you are using echo, use a caret character immediately before the pipe or redirection character (for example, ^>, ^<, or ^| ). If you need to use the caret character (^), type two (^^).

1
  • Better, but still a bit fuzzy. See my answer
    – dbenham
    Dec 3, 2013 at 11:24
12

Infinite Recursion describes the general behavior of ^, but is a bit fuzzy on why it must be used within IN ('yourCommand').

yourCommand is actually executed implicitly within its own CMD.EXE process using C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe /c yourCommand. Obviously the pipe must be included in the command in your case. But the entire line must be parsed by the batch parser before it can pass the IN() clause on to be executed. Without the ^, the | confuses the batch parser. The ^ escapes (protects) the pipe during the initial batch parsing.

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  • Thanks for your answer payeli.Can u look into the code where ^| were used in my batch file.SET "InFile=test.txt" SET "OutFile=out.txt" SET "Replace=test" SET "ReplaceWith=sample" REM Get Total Lines Number [including empty lines] FOR /F %%A IN ('TYPE "%InFile%"^|find /v /c ""') DO SET "Till=%%A" REM Create The OutFile with changes SETLOCAL EnableDelayedExpansion <"!InFile!" ( FOR /L %%a IN (1 1 0) DO SET /p "=" FOR /L %%A IN (1 1 %Till%) DO ( SET "line=" SET /P "line=" IF "!line!x" == "x" ( Echo. ) ELSE ( Echo !line:%Replace%=%ReplaceWith%!) ) )>>"%OutFile%" ENDLOCAL Dec 3, 2013 at 11:48
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    @user3059908 - It is nearly impossible to read the code in your comment, and I have no idea what your problem is. Perhaps you should create a new question with properly formatted code and a clearly stated question. (describe the expected behavior, and how it is not working)
    – dbenham
    Dec 3, 2013 at 12:00
1

In the given example the caret is used for escaping the special symbol. Though it has other usages in the windows commands

1] In set it is a XOR operator:

set /a "_num=5^3"    &::0101 XOR 0011 = 0110 (decimal 6)

2] In findstr is used for regular expressions of finding string at the beginning of a line:

Echo 12G6 |FindStr /R "[^0-9]"  &::this will check for non-numeric characters

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