155

I have a batch script that executes a task and sends the output to a text file. Is there a way to have the output show on the console window as well?

For Example:

c:\Windows>dir > windows-dir.txt

Is there a way to have the output of dir display in the console window as well as put it into the text file?

3
  • Here are explained the redirections you can make, and some examples.<br> Hope it helps :)
    – emoSTN
    Commented Sep 21, 2012 at 11:10
  • 3
    Possible Duplicate: Displaying Windows command prompt output and redirecting it to a file
    – Ryan Gates
    Commented Feb 12, 2013 at 5:14
  • Please note, @Vadzim, that a question asked on Feb 2 2009 at 16:38 cannot be deemed to be a duplicate of a question asked almost three months later on Apr 28 2009 at 06:32.
    – Compo
    Commented Dec 10, 2017 at 12:41

12 Answers 12

239

No, you can't with pure redirection.
But with some tricks (like tee.bat) you can.

I try to explain the redirection a bit.

You redirect one of the ten streams with > file or < file
It is unimportant, if the redirection is before or after the command, so these two lines are nearly the same.

dir > file.txt
> file.txt dir

The redirection in this example is only a shortcut for 1>, this means the stream 1 (STDOUT) will be redirected.
So you can redirect any stream with prepending the number like 2> err.txt and it is also allowed to redirect multiple streams in one line.

dir 1> files.txt 2> err.txt 3> nothing.txt

In this example the "standard output" will go into files.txt, all errors will be in err.txt and the stream3 will go into nothing.txt (DIR doesn't use the stream 3).
Stream0 is STDIN
Stream1 is STDOUT
Stream2 is STDERR
Stream3-9 are not used

But what happens if you try to redirect the same stream multiple times?

dir > files.txt > two.txt

"There can be only one", and it is always the last one!
So it is equal to dir > two.txt

Ok, there is one extra possibility, redirecting a stream to another stream.

dir 1>files.txt 2>&1 

2>&1 redirects stream2 to stream1 and 1>files.txt redirects all to files.txt.
The order is important here!

dir ... 1>nul 2>&1
dir ... 2>&1 1>nul

are different. The first one redirects all (STDOUT and STDERR) to NUL,
but the second line redirects the STDOUT to NUL and STDERR to the "empty" STDOUT.

As one conclusion, it is obvious why the examples of Otávio Décio and andynormancx can't work.

command > file >&1
dir > file.txt >&2

Both try to redirect stream1 two times, but "There can be only one", and it's always the last one.
So you get

command 1>&1
dir 1>&2

And in the first sample redirecting of stream1 to stream1 is not allowed (and not very useful).

4
  • 28
    So it is impossible with native windows shell
    – Fantastory
    Commented Mar 7, 2014 at 10:24
  • 1
    What about the second mechanism "handle duplication"? I experimented with 3<&2 (note the LT instead of GT), and then 3>errors.txt. But this ended badly - all subsequent stderr output was captured to errors.txt (that is - from other commands too!). Commented Sep 13, 2016 at 23:36
  • You could use for /f "delims=" %%v in ('dir') do echo %%v>>file.txt though.
    – amegyoushi
    Commented Nov 18, 2018 at 3:15
  • 3
    @CharlesMcKelvey (and all upvoters) would you have accepted an answer that only says "No"? Or would you have preferred some explanation? Commented Jan 10, 2020 at 17:03
36

Just use the Windows version of the UNIX tee command (found from http://unxutils.sourceforge.net) in this way:

mycommand > tee outpu_file.txt

If you also need the STDERR output, then use the following.
The 2>&1 combines the STDERR output into STDOUT (the primary stream).

mycommand 2>&1 | tee output_file.txt
6
  • 4
    The PowerShell Tee-Object offers similar functionality. Get-Process | Tee-Object -file c:\scripts\test.txt
    – Kevin Obee
    Commented Dec 2, 2016 at 12:17
  • 1
    I tried this in both powershell and the regular shell. 1>tee a.txt will redirect stdout to a file named tee instead of calling the tee command. Can anyone confirm this answer works for them?
    – mafu
    Commented Jan 11, 2019 at 14:07
  • @mafu I can confirm this.
    – Cerno
    Commented Feb 10, 2020 at 13:32
  • @mafu The answer above is slightly incorect. You have to use the pipe "|" instead of the ">" in the top example. Weirdly, the order of the STDOUT and STDERR output was mixed up on the command line in that case. The bottom example works perfectly for me though.
    – Cerno
    Commented Feb 10, 2020 at 13:49
  • Also, the sourceforge download was broken for me. I found an alternative host here: wzw.tum.de/public-html/syring/win32/UnxUtilsDist.html (University of Munich)
    – Cerno
    Commented Feb 10, 2020 at 13:50
13

If you don't need the output in real time (i.e. as the program is writing it) you could add

type windows-dir.txt

after that line.

1
  • or on the same line (useful at the prompt): dir > windows-dir.txt & type windows-dir.txt. This also applies to blocks: ( echo %date% <NL> echo %username% <NL> echo %time% <NL> pause>CON )>test.txt & type test.txt. However, if the output is required in real time, you can use e.g. a windows port of the tee tool for that…
    – mousio
    Commented Apr 6, 2011 at 21:36
9

The solution that worked for me was: dir > a.txt | type a.txt.

2
  • 2
    This works with command with low output. With large output command it don't works because it shows only the first buffer. He it's asking for a real time output while saving the output to a log file.
    – NetVicious
    Commented May 2, 2016 at 8:58
  • It would be problematic if you use >> instead of >
    – Nime Cloud
    Commented May 11, 2016 at 8:21
7

Yes, there is a way to show a single command output on the console (screen) and in a file. Using your example, use...

@ECHO OFF
FOR /F "tokens=*" %%I IN ('DIR') DO ECHO %%I & ECHO %%I>>windows-dir.txt

Detailed explanation:

The FOR command parses the output of a command or text into a variable, which can be referenced multiple times.

For a command, such as DIR /B, enclose in single quotes as shown in example below. Replace the DIR /B text with your desired command.

FOR /F "tokens=*" %%I IN ('DIR /B') DO ECHO %%I & ECHO %%I>>FILE.TXT

For displaying text, enclose text in double quotes as shown in example below.

FOR /F "tokens=*" %%I IN ("Find this text on console (screen) and in file") DO ECHO %%I & ECHO %%I>>FILE.TXT

... And with line wrapping...

FOR /F "tokens=*" %%I IN ("Find this text on console (screen) and in file") DO (
  ECHO %%I & ECHO %%I>>FILE.TXT
)

If you have times when you want the output only on console (screen), and other times sent only to file, and other times sent to both, specify the "DO" clause of the FOR loop using a variable, as shown below with %TOECHOWHERE%.

@ECHO OFF
FOR %%I IN (TRUE FALSE) DO (
  FOR %%J IN (TRUE FALSE) DO (
    SET TOSCREEN=%%I & SET TOFILE=%%J & CALL :Runit)
)
GOTO :Finish

:Runit
  REM Both TOSCREEN and TOFILE get assigned a trailing space in the FOR loops
  REM above when the FOR loops are evaluating the first item in the list,
  REM "TRUE".  So, the first value of TOSCREEN is "TRUE " (with a trailing
  REM space), the second value is "FALSE" (no trailing or leading space).
  REM Adding the ": =" text after "TOSCREEN" tells the command processor to
  REM remove all spaces from the value in the "TOSCREEN" variable.
  IF "%TOSCREEN: =%"=="TRUE" (
      IF "%TOFILE: =%"=="TRUE" (
          SET TEXT=On screen, and in "FILE.TXT"
          SET TOECHOWHERE="ECHO %%I & ECHO %%I>>FILE.TXT"
        ) ELSE (
          SET TEXT=On screen, not in "FILE.TXT"
          SET TOECHOWHERE="ECHO %%I"
      )
    ) ELSE (
      IF "%TOFILE: =%"=="TRUE" (
          SET TEXT=Not on screen, but in "FILE.TXT"
          SET TOECHOWHERE="ECHO %%I>>FILE.txt"
        ) ELSE (
          SET TEXT=Not on screen, nor in "FILE.TXT"
          SET TOECHOWHERE="ECHO %%I>NUL"
      )
  )
  FOR /F "tokens=*" %%I IN ("%TEXT%") DO %TOECHOWHERE:~1,-1%
GOTO :eof

:Finish
  ECHO Finished [this text to console (screen) only].
  PAUSE
1
  • You should use delims= instead.
    – amegyoushi
    Commented Nov 18, 2018 at 3:16
3

My option was this:

Create a subroutine that takes in the message and automates the process of sending it to both console and log file.

setlocal
set logfile=logfile.log

call :screenandlog "%DATE% %TIME% This message goes to the screen and to the log"    

goto :eof

:screenandlog
set message=%~1
echo %message% & echo %message% >> %logfile%
exit /b

If you add a variable to the message, be sure to remove the quotes in it before sending it to the subroutine or it can screw your batch. Of course this only works for echoing.

1
  • WOW YES! I really like this!! I made three changes though, I hope you like them. 1) I use setlocal enabledelayedexpansion instead of just setlocal 2) I use the delayed expansion for the logfile variable, so >> !logfile! instead of >> %logfile% within the subroutine. This way, it works when called from within a code block (like within an if statement). 3) I removed the "set message" line because there's no need for the extra variable. We already have it in $~1 so I have echo $~1 for both echo commands.
    – Nate
    Commented Sep 27, 2019 at 18:40
2
command > file >&1
7
  • Its faster when you do not write the data out to the screen as your not filling the buffer up with crap but rather letting you batch job run. if you are debugging i would not use the > file syntax. Commented Feb 2, 2009 at 16:48
  • @andynormancx yup forgot to type that instead of cut and paste from the CMD. Commented Feb 2, 2009 at 16:49
  • I could not get the syntax to work under a windows command prompt and have went with the type command instead. Commented Feb 2, 2009 at 16:49
  • &2 does work however the file is now not being created when I test it. Commented Feb 2, 2009 at 16:50
  • 6
    if I do "dir > file.txt >&2" file.txt is not being created. The output of the directory is being echoed in the console but the file isn't being created. The file is created when the ">&2" is not present. Commented Feb 2, 2009 at 17:03
2

If you want to append instead of replace the output file, you may want to use

dir 1>> files.txt 2>> err.txt

or

dir 1>> files.txt 2>>&1
2

I made a simple C# console which can handle real-time output to both cmd screen and log

class Tee
{
    static int Main(string[] args)
    {
        try
        {
            string logFilePath = Path.GetFullPath(args[0]);

            using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(logFilePath, true))
            {
                for (int value; (value = Console.In.Read()) != -1;)
                {
                    var word = Char.ConvertFromUtf32(value);
                    Console.Write(word);
                    writer.Write(word);
                }
            }
        }
        catch (Exception)
        {
            return 1;
        }
        return 0;
    }
}

The batch file usage is the same as how you use Unix tee

foo | tee xxx.log

And here is the repository which includes the Tee.exe in case you don't have tool to compile https://github.com/iamshiao/Tee

1

I like atn's answer, but it was not as trivial for me to download as wintee, which is also open source and only gives the tee functionality (useful if you just want tee and not the entire set of unix utilities). I learned about this from davor's answer to Displaying Windows command prompt output and redirecting it to a file, where you also find reference to the unix utilities.

0

The solution provided by "Tomas R" works perfect for the OP's question and it natively available.

Try: chkdsk c: > output.txt | type output.txt

The output is of this command involves a completion percentage that gets serially output to the file hence it will look a bit messy (i.e. the text will be appended as it progress). This does not happen to the bits that gets output to STDOUT (the screen). It is how it would be if you just do the same command without redirection.

0
-3

I think you want something along the lines of this:

echo Your Msg> YourTxtFile.txt

Or if you want a new line:

echo Your Msg>> YourTxtFile.txt

These commands are great for logs.

Note: This will sometimes glitch and replace the whole text file on my computer.

Another Note: If the file does not exist, it will create the file.

2
  • 1
    no, OP wanted to have the output into a file and on screen. Yours just writes to file. (And > is designed to overwrite the file. Use >> to append)
    – Stephan
    Commented Jan 20, 2020 at 14:28
  • Another answer was completely bogus, so the confidence is not high. Commented Oct 12, 2022 at 23:05

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