The following command copies and moves a file but I also need it to overwrite the file it's replacing.
xcopy /s c:\mmyinbox\test.doc C:\myoutbox
Add /Y to the command line
"
's. If you have a "
inside an argument which is enclosed (which is never the case for filenames) double it.
dir /X
in folder above to get the directory name with a ~
in it instead. The you don't need the quotes if you use that abridged variant. Source: superuser.com/questions/179449/…
Add /y
to the command line of xcopy
:
Example:
xcopy /y c:\mmyinbox\test.doc C:\myoutbox
you need to simply add /Y
xcopy /s c:\mmyinbox\test.doc C:\myoutbox /Y
and if you're using path with spaces, try this
xcopy /s "c:\mmyinbox\test.doc" "C:\myoutbox" /Y
For copying one file to another directory overwriting without any prompt i ended up using the simply COPY command:
copy /Y ".\mySourceFile.txt" "..\target\myDestinationFile.txt"
If the copy command is run from within a batch job you do not need to use the /Y switch: it will overwrite existing files.
A command that would copy in any case
xcopy "path\source" "path\destination" /s/h/e/k/f/c/y
Here's what worked for me to copy and overwrite a file from B:\ to Z:\ drive in a batch script.
echo F| XCOPY B:\utils\MyFile.txt Z:\Backup\CopyFile.txt /Y
The "/Y" parameter at the end overwrites the destination file, if it exists.
xcopy
has been deprecated. Although it's still ships -robocopy
is the successor.