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I need to concatenate some relatively large text files, and would prefer to do this via the command line. Unfortunately I only have Windows, and cannot install new software.

type file1.txt file2.txt > out.txt

allows me to almost get what I want, but I don't want the 1st line of file2.txt to be included in out.txt.

I have noticed that more has the +n option to specify a starting line, but I haven't managed to combine these to get the result I want. I'm aware that this may not be possible in Windows, and I can always edit out.txt by hand to get rid of the line, but is there a simple way of doing it from the command line?

12 Answers 12

140
more +2 file2.txt > temp
type temp file1.txt > out.txt

or you can use copy. See copy /? for more.

copy /b temp+file1.txt  out.txt
5
  • 4
    Of course! I would have preferred to have avoided the use of temporary files though. I tried to use parentheses, pipes and < to get it into one command, but couldn't get anywhere. The copy command is much faster, but it puts a SUB character at the end. Is there a way to avoid this?
    – James
    Mar 19, 2010 at 13:13
  • 20
    I would add that if you want to concatenate ALL files you can do copy /b *.txt combined.txt without having to list the files individually.
    – Phlucious
    Jun 1, 2015 at 18:13
  • 1
    more seemingly convert tab into spaces, pity!
    – Antonio
    Aug 18, 2015 at 8:13
  • is there any command to retrieve original files from merged files? Feb 25, 2016 at 7:33
  • 3
    @ghostdog74: I think it has to be type file1.txt temp > out.txt to actually append the second file, without a header to the first one
    – Marius
    Feb 25, 2016 at 9:20
63

I use this, and it works well for me:

TYPE \\Server\Share\Folder\*.csv >> C:\Folder\ConcatenatedFile.csv

Of course, before every run, you have to DELETE C:\Folder\ConcatenatedFile.csv

The only issue is that if all files have headers, then it will be repeated in all files.

5
  • 2
    When I enter a filename for the concatenated file, which means it's listed at the end of the files in the loaction (alphabetical order), then windows seems to concatenate twice! I ended up using a filename of 1filename.csv to not have the problem. I guess concatting into a different folder should work also...
    – SebK
    Aug 6, 2014 at 6:54
  • 1
    If you use > instead of >>, you do not have to delete the file beforehand. > redirects output and creates the file new every time. >> redirects output and appends.
    – Eddie Deyo
    Dec 5, 2014 at 14:50
  • 1
    How does this skip the first line in file2, which the OP asked about? Aug 26, 2015 at 22:03
  • 1
    It doesn't skip the first line in file2. I missed that part of the question.
    – Raj More
    Aug 28, 2015 at 14:28
  • 1
    is there any command to retrieve original files from merged files? Feb 25, 2016 at 7:33
23

I don't have enough reputation points to comment on the recommendation to use *.csv >> ConcatenatedFile.csv, but I can add a warning:

If you create ConcatenatedFile.csv file in the same directory that you are using for concatenation it will be added to itself.

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  • 2
    How does this skip the first line in file2, which the OP asked about? Aug 26, 2015 at 22:03
6

Use the FOR command to echo a file line by line, and with the 'skip' option to miss a number of starting lines...

FOR /F "skip=1" %i in (file2.txt) do @echo %i

You could redirect the output of a batch file, containing something like...

FOR /F %%i in (file1.txt) do @echo %%i
FOR /F "skip=1" %%i in (file2.txt) do @echo %%i

Note the double % when a FOR variable is used within a batch file.

4

I would put this in a comment to ghostdog74, except my rep is too low, so here goes.

more +2 file2.txt > temp
This code will actually ignore rows 1 and 2 of the file. OP wants to keep all rows from the first file (to maintain the header row), and then exclude the first row (presumably the same header row) on the second file, so to exclude only the header row OP should use more +1.

type temp file1.txt > out.txt

It is unclear what order results from this code. Is temp appended to file1.txt (as desired), or is file1.txt appended to temp (undesired as the header row would be buried in the middle of the resulting file).

In addition, these operations take a REALLY LONG TIME with large files (e.g. 300MB)

4

Here's how to do this:

(type file1.txt && more +1 file2.txt) > out.txt
3

In powershell:

Get-Content file1.txt | Out-File out.txt
Get-Content file2.txt | Select-Object -Skip 1 | Out-File -Append out.txt
2

I know you said that you couldn't install any software, but I'm not sure how tight that restriction is. Anyway, I had the same issue (trying to concatenate two files with presumably the same headers) and I thought I'd provide an alternative answer for others who arrive at this page, since it worked just great for me.

After trying a whole bunch of commands in windows and being severely frustrated, and also trying all sorts of graphical editors that promised to be able to open large files, but then couldn't, I finally got back to my Linux roots and opened my Cygwin prompt. Two commands:

cp file1.csv out.csv
tail -n+2 file2.csv >> out.csv

For file1.csv 800MB and file2.csv 400MB, those two commands took under 5 seconds on my machine. In a Cygwin prompt, no less. I thought Linux commands were supposed to be slow in Cygwin but that approach took far less effort and was way easier than any windows approach I could find.

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0

You can also simply try this

type file2.txt >> file1.txt

It will append the content of file2.txt at the end of file1.txt

If you need original file1.txt, take a backup beforehand. Or you can do this

type file1.txt > out.txt
type file2.txt >> out.txt

If you want to have a line break at the end of the first file, you can try the following command before appending.

type file1.txt > out.txt
printf "\n" >> out.txt
type file2.txt >> out.txt
0

The help for copy explains that wildcards can be used to concatenate multiple files into one.

For example, to copy all .txt files in the current folder that start with "abc" into a single file named xyz.txt:

copy abc*.txt xyz.txt
-1
more +2 file1.txt > type > out.txt && type file2.txt > out.txt
-1

This takes Test.txt with headers and appends Test1.txt and Test2.txt and writes results to Testresult.txt file after stripping headers from second and third files respectively:

type C:\Test.txt > C:\Testresult.txt && more +1 C:\Test1.txt >> C:\Testresult.txt && more +1 C:\Test2.txt >> C:\Testresult.txt

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