I am trying to create a shortcut in windows which points to an .exe file in the same folder. The catch is that I would like the shortcut to work even when the .exe and shortcut are moved to different folder together. Therefore the shortcut should point to a relative path, not an absolute path
My first idea was to create a .bat file which (1) first navigates to its own location using the special character %~dp0, then (2) runs the exe.
cd %~dp0
MyFile.exe
However, this is not working because command line is disabled on the network I am working on.
My second idea was to follow the instructions here: Is it possible to make a shortcut to a relative path in Windows that runs as admin? and set the shortcut's target to %windir%\system32\cmd.exe
or %COMSPEC%
, both are kinda of faux ways of making a shortcut run the command line.
Still no luck, my network administrator has disabled this functionality as well.
That being said, is there a way to use the special character %~dp0
directly in the "target" field of a windows shortcut? I would ideally like to just set the target of the shortcut to
%~dp0/MyFile.exe
But maybe there is some syntax I am missing here.
%~
is CMD syntax for batch file parameters and loop variables. This syntax has no meaning in a shell shortcut.