62

I received a line of code from someone who answered one of my questions, but I am confused: what do the "&&" do in this batch file.

@echo off
set /p Quest="How are you today? "
echo %Quest% > Results.txt
findstr /r /i "not.*good not.*well" Results.txt >nul && echo Sorry && goto pause
findstr /i "good well" Results.txt >nul && echo My day is doing good as well
:pause
pause
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  • 2
    Wow, robvanderwoude.com/condexec.php
    – Mathemats
    Mar 5, 2015 at 23:42
  • @Mathemats Thanks for linking me to website, it has everything I need.
    – Kit
    Mar 5, 2015 at 23:47
  • It's definitely a good beginning site, but take note that a good chunk of it is outdated or obsolete - everything on the debug page, for example. Mar 5, 2015 at 23:51
  • @SomethingDark Okay, I will keep that in mind while I learn from it.
    – Kit
    Mar 6, 2015 at 0:34
  • The "eqivalent to" column on that page is not eqivalent when output redirection is used, see this post: stackoverflow.com/a/10358437/1941779
    – CrouZ
    Dec 25, 2015 at 14:25

2 Answers 2

167
  • & separates commands on a line.

  • && executes this command only if previous command's errorlevel is 0.

  • || (not used above) executes this command only if previous command's errorlevel is NOT 0

  • > output to a file

  • >> append output to a file

  • < input from a file

  • | output of one command into the input of another command

  • ^ escapes any of the above, including itself, if needed to be passed to a program

  • " parameters with spaces must be enclosed in quotes

  • + used with copy to concatenate files. E.G. copy file1+file2 newfile

  • , used with copy to indicate missing parameters. This updates the files modified date. E.G. copy /b file1,,

  • %variablename% an inbuilt or user set environmental variable

  • !variablename! a user set environmental variable expanded at execution time, turned with SetLocal EnableDelayedExpansion command

  • %<number> (%1) the nth command line parameter passed to a batch file. %0 is the batchfile's name.

  • %* (%*) the entire command line.

  • %<a letter> or %%<a letter> (%A or %%A) the variable in a for loop. Single % sign at command prompt and double % sign in a batch file.

4
  • +1 for putting all that in one place. I don't understand the comma description. copy /b file1,, returned "The file cannot be copied to itself." I ran it from the command line. Would it do something different from within a batch file?
    – riderBill
    Jul 29, 2017 at 3:34
  • 14
    Where it comes from?
    – Deilan
    Feb 7, 2018 at 14:31
  • 1
    a clarification about one ampersand & "Use to separate multiple commands on one command line. Cmd.exe runs the first command, and then the second command. " So I understand, that commands separated with & runs sequential like with &&, but they run always (no matter the errorlevel of a previous command) –
    – Dawid Ohia
    May 29, 2019 at 13:36
  • 7
    Great info, but what is the source?
    – cowlinator
    Jul 8, 2019 at 18:17
80

&& runs the second command on the line when the first command comes back successfully (i.e. errorlevel == 0). The opposite of && is ||, which runs the second command when the first command is unsuccessful (i.e. errorlevel != 0).

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