115

I'm looking for a simple way to test if an executable exists in the PATH environment variable from a Windows batch file.

Usage of external tools not provided by the OS is not allowed. The minimal Windows version required is Windows XP.

2

8 Answers 8

107

Windows Vista and later versions ship with a program called where.exe that searches for programs in the path. It works like this:

D:\>where notepad
C:\Windows\System32\notepad.exe
C:\Windows\notepad.exe

D:\>where where
C:\Windows\System32\where.exe

For use in a batch file you can use the /q switch, which just sets ERRORLEVEL and doesn't produce any output.

where /q myapplication
IF ERRORLEVEL 1 (
    ECHO The application is missing. Ensure it is installed and placed in your PATH.
    EXIT /B
) ELSE (
    ECHO Application exists. Let's go!
)

Or a simple (but less readable) shorthand version that prints the message and exits your app:

where /q myapplication || ECHO Cound not find app. && EXIT /B
0
76
for %%X in (myExecutable.exe) do (set FOUND=%%~$PATH:X)
if defined FOUND ...

If you need this for different extensions, just iterate over PATHEXT:

set FOUND=
for %%e in (%PATHEXT%) do (
  for %%X in (myExecutable%%e) do (
    if not defined FOUND (
      set FOUND=%%~$PATH:X
    )
  )
)

Could be that where also exists already on legacy Windows versions, but I don't have access to one, so I cannot tell. On my machine the following also works:

where myExecutable

and returns with a non-zero exit code if it couldn't be found. In a batch you probably also want to redirect output to NUL, though.

Keep in mind

Parsing in batch (.bat) files and on the command line differs (because batch files have %0%9), so you have to double the % there. On the command line this isn't necessary, so for variables are just %X.

8
  • 1
    I like your approach but it would be even better if you could provide the full version, the one that does also use PATHEXT for this.
    – sorin
    Commented Jan 26, 2011 at 17:03
  • 4
    For XP you need the loop script (or download where.exe from the RK). Vista and 7 ships with where.exe. I know the OP specifically said XP, but for posterity the best answer is always to use where myExecutable. Commented Jul 7, 2011 at 8:37
  • Ryan: Huh? I don't think I can parse your sentence.
    – Joey
    Commented Jul 7, 2011 at 9:42
  • 2
    i'm a batch scripting beginner and am not sure what the %%x means. On my Windows 7 system i tried typing: for %%X in (myExecutable.exe) do (set FOUND=%%~$PATH:X) and then hit returned. i got this in response: C:\Users\James>for %%X in (cmd.exe) do (set FOUND=%%~$PATH:X) %%X was unexpected at this time.
    – simgineer
    Commented Jan 5, 2012 at 7:53
  • 3
    simengineer: Parsing in batch files and on the command line differs (because batch files have %0%9), so you have to double the % there. On the command line this isn't necessary, so for variables are just %x.
    – Joey
    Commented Jan 5, 2012 at 11:42
19

Here is a simple solution that attempts to run the application and handles any error afterwards.

file.exe /?  2> NUL
IF NOT %ERRORLEVEL%==9009 ECHO file.exe exists in path

Error code 9009 usually means file not found.

The only downside is that file.exe is actually executed if found (which in some cases is not desiderable).

1
  • 26
    the only downside is that "file.exe" is executed (which in some cases is unwanted)
    – eadmaster
    Commented Nov 19, 2013 at 6:20
6

This can be accomplished via parameter substitution.

%~$PATH:1

This returns the full path of the executable filename in %1, else an empty string.

This does not work with user-defined variables. So if the executable filename is not a parameter to your script, then you need a subroutine. For example:

call :s_which app.exe
if not "%_path%" == "" (
  "%_path%"
)

goto :eof

:s_which
  setlocal
  endlocal & set _path=%~$PATH:1
  goto :eof

See http://ss64.com/nt/syntax-args.html

1
  • 1
    Interesting trick with setlocal but for %%X in (myExecutable.exe) do (set FOUND=%%~$PATH:X) is one line solution with for used as workaround for %%~$PATH:X in order to avoid call and %~$PATH:1.
    – gavenkoa
    Commented Jan 22, 2017 at 22:43
3

For those looking for a PowerShell option. You can use the Get-Command cmdlet passing two items. First give the current dir location with .\ prefixed, then give just the exe name.

(Get-Command ".\notepad", "notepad" -ErrorAction Ignore -CommandType Application) -ne $null

That will return true if found local or in system wide paths.

1
  • 1
    Nothing better than downvote and run users. If you disagree and are going to go as far as downvoting, then also add a comment to give your reason why you disagree that this is not a good approach at getting the desired results.
    – John C
    Commented Aug 17, 2020 at 20:13
0
@echo off
set found=
set prog=cmd.exe
for %%i in (%path%) do if exist %%i\%prog% set found=%%i
echo "%found%"
if "%found%"=="" ....
3
  • 3
    Won't work as for is not smart enough to parse the contents of PATH. It will miss directories with spaces, for example. And even when you use for /f with delims=; it will not work correctly if a directory contains a ; and is quoted.
    – Joey
    Commented Jan 26, 2011 at 9:58
  • @Joey, how about string replacement? Replace ; with "; ": set quotedPath="%PATH:;="; "%".
    – XP1
    Commented Apr 23, 2012 at 3:54
  • 1
    XP1: Nope, still useless. Try it by appending "C:\Folder with; semicolon, quoted" to the path and see what happens. At least here it tries treating every »word« separately which, in a way, is worse than the behaviour before.
    – Joey
    Commented Apr 23, 2012 at 5:45
-1

Sometimes this simple solution works, where you check to see if the output matches what you expect. The first line runs the command and grabs the last line of standard output.

FOR /F "tokens=*" %%i in (' "xcopy /? 2> nul" ') do SET xcopyoutput=%%i
if "%xcopyoutput%"=="" echo xcopy not in path.
1
  • But what if the system environment uses an other language? Commented Aug 19, 2013 at 15:03
-1

Use command : powershell Test-Path "exe which you looking for"

It will return True if its present, otherwise False.

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    This won't work. Test-Path only checks the specified path, i.e. Test-Path nuget.exe will return true only if nuget.exe is in the current directory. If nuget.exe is not in the current directory, it will return false, even if it is in a directory listed in the PATH variable. In PowerShell Get-Command might work better(stackoverflow.com/questions/11242368/…), but take into account that for PowerShell the current directory is not in the path. Commented Sep 18, 2015 at 7:37
  • 1
    As @RonaldZarits pointed out, for full PowerShell support, you can use the Get-Command with two options. First give the current dir location, then give just the exe name. (Get-Command ".\notepad", "notepad" -ErrorAction Ignore -CommandType Application) -ne $null will return true if found local or in path.
    – John C
    Commented Jan 31, 2019 at 18:10

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