290

Note: This question originally asked in 2009, when powershell did not have support for the && operator. In 2019, per Jay's answer, microsoft added support for && and || in Powershell 7. https://stackoverflow.com/a/564092/234


Original Question

&& is notoriously hard to search for on Google Search, but the best I've found is this article which says to use -and.

Unfortunately it doesn't give any more information, and I can't find out what I'm supposed to do with -and (again, a notoriously hard thing to search for).

The context I'm trying to use it in is "execute cmd1, and if successful, execute cmd2", basically this:

csc /t:exe /out:a.exe SomeFile.cs && a.exe

If you just want to run multiple commands on a single line and you don't care if the first one fails or not, you can use ; For most of my purposes this is fine.

For example: kill -n myapp; ./myapp.exe.

8

13 Answers 13

300

In CMD, '&&' means "execute command 1, and if it succeeds, execute command 2". I have used it for things like:

build && run_tests

In PowerShell, the closest thing you can do is:

(build) -and (run_tests)

It has the same logic, but the output text from the commands is lost. Maybe it is good enough for you, though.

If you're doing this in a script, you will probably be better off separating the statements, like this:

build
if ($?) {
    run_tests
}

2019/11/27: The &&operator is now available for PowerShell 7 Preview 5+:

PS > echo "Hello!" && echo "World!"
Hello!
World!

15
  • 3
    RE: "ridiculous that they would remove" - I don't like to think of PowerShell as "CMD with the stupid parts removed". is.gd/k92B
    – Jay Bazuzi
    Feb 19, 2009 at 20:18
  • 165
    I don't like to think of PowerShell as "CMD with the stupid parts removed". I like to think of it as "Bash without any of the useful bits".
    – Pod
    Jun 16, 2009 at 8:49
  • 33
    You can also do build ; if ($?) { run_tests } on the command line too.
    – docwhat
    Jun 22, 2016 at 15:16
  • 37
    The quickest way to real frustration when learning PowerShell is to start by thinking that it is just an expanded CMD or bash. It has a fundamentally different model, epecially when it comes to input, output, piping, and results. Start with a good tutorial or overview, and don't try too hard to make syntax from other shells work. You have to take it on its own terms.
    – Mark Meuer
    Feb 24, 2017 at 20:19
  • 13
    Taking PowerShell on its own terms, how do I run a command and then, only if that command succeeds, run another command? I don't think that's imposing bash ideas on PowerShell. It's basic shell functionality. So far the best I've seen is build ; if ($?) { run_tests } which I'll be using from now on. I hope the PowerShell team adds && support!
    – Nate
    Sep 17, 2019 at 17:32
32

&& and || were on the list of things to implement (still are) but did not pop up as the next most useful thing to add. The reason is that we have -AND and -OR.

If you think it is important, please file a suggestion on Connect and we'll consider it for V3.

9
  • 13
    I'm signed up on Connect, and have nominated myself for powershell, but I can't figure out how to place a suggestion. The Connect website is really complex and confusing :-( Feb 22, 2009 at 20:04
  • 6
    I couldn't find a pre-existing request so I made one: connect.microsoft.com/PowerShell/feedback/details/778798/… Feb 8, 2013 at 0:32
  • 37
    You know, the question is still how to write an equivalent, and your answer would be a lot more useful if you added an example of using -AND
    – Kyeotic
    Jan 20, 2014 at 16:36
  • 6
    It's important because it's a basic flow control tool used on systems older than windows for almost eternity. Thus is presents YET ANOTHER breaking difference between linux and windows.
    – airtonix
    Dec 28, 2016 at 6:28
  • 10
    I hope Jeffrey Snover is listening, this SO should be enough reason to implement it by now. It's been too long, and now PowerShell starts to popup in places, like VSCode uses it as a default terminal in Windows. This is total pain without &&, the -and eats the output, not equivalent at all.
    – Ciantic
    Oct 14, 2017 at 17:29
21

Try this:

$errorActionPreference='Stop'; csc /t:exe /out:a.exe SomeFile.cs; a.exe
3
  • 14
    Note: If the first command fails the second is still going to run.
    – BrunoLM
    May 25, 2016 at 20:41
  • 4
    Preference variable $ErrorActionPreference only governs how non-terminating errors reported by cmdlets are treated; external utilities such as csc and a.exe never report such errors (they only reflect their exit status in $? (success flag) and $LASTEXITCODE (the specific exit code reported)), so your command line amounts to unconditional execution of both commands (the equivalent of cmd's csc /t:exe /out:a.exe SomeFile.cs & a.exe)
    – mklement0
    Jan 21, 2017 at 18:53
  • But this command does preserve command output. Mar 22 at 12:11
19

If your command is available in cmd.exe (something like python ./script.py, but not PowerShell command like ii . (this means to open the current directory by Windows Explorer)), you can run cmd.exe within PowerShell. The syntax is like this:

cmd /c "command1 && command2"

Here, && is provided by cmd syntax described in this question.

2
  • Thanks!! This is definitely the best answer because the result is as close as possible as if you were using CMD natively. For me it worked perfectly, I needed to use with Gitlab-Runner on Windows, where CMD support is deprecated now... as PowerShell doesn't have the same behavior to chain commands with && or || I really MUST use the CMD "inside" Powershell, something like: PS C:\Users\myusername> cmd /c "where ssh-agent || echo Need to install OpenSSH or GIT on this Runner"
    – MMJ
    Dec 28, 2022 at 17:27
  • Quick Tip: With Powershell if you need to use the where command for the same result as you get in CMD, you can't just use where, you need to use where.exe (with the extension), because without the extension Powershell uses an alias to its own version of the where command.
    – MMJ
    Dec 28, 2022 at 17:32
8

I tried this sequence of commands in PowerShell:

First Test

PS C:\> $MyVar = "C:\MyTxt.txt"
PS C:\> ($MyVar -ne $null) -and (Get-Content $MyVar)
True

($MyVar -ne $null) returned true and (Get-Content $MyVar) also returned true.

Second Test

PS C:\> $MyVar = $null
PS C:\> ($MyVar -ne $null) -and (Get-Content $MyVar)
False

($MyVar -ne $null) returned false and so far I must assume the (Get-Content $MyVar) also returned false.

The third test proved the second condition was not even analyzed.

PS C:\> ($MyVar -ne $null) -and (Get-Content "C:\MyTxt.txt")
False

($MyVar -ne $null) returned false and proved the second condition (Get-Content "C:\MyTxt.txt") never ran, by returning false on the whole command.

1
  • 1
    Your are right! this behaves as the && operator. Even a $() on the right side will not let to evaluate this! Mar 15, 2018 at 11:09
4

Just install PowerShell 7 (go here, and scroll and expand the assets section). This release has implemented the pipeline chain operators.

3

Very old question, but for the newcomers: maybe the PowerShell version (similar but not equivalent) that the question is looking for, is to use -and as follows:

(build_command) -and (run_tests_command)

5
  • 2
    This may be ok for your use case, but it is not behaving like &&, in that it ignores the exit code of build_command. Jul 22, 2019 at 0:10
  • This is definitely not doing the correct thing. It will run the second command even if the first one failed.
    – Nate
    Sep 17, 2019 at 17:36
  • this is completely wrong. ; is the equivalent to & in cmd and ; in bash. It's definitely not the same as && in cmd
    – phuclv
    Oct 23, 2019 at 1:38
  • 1
    It also mutes STDOUT and STDERR for both processes.
    – Dragas
    Jun 24, 2020 at 6:33
  • After numerous edits this duplicates the accepted answer stackoverflow.com/a/564092/389424
    – janv8000
    Jun 1, 2022 at 8:57
2

A verbose equivalent is to combine $LASTEXITCODE and -eq 0:

msbuild.exe args; if ($LASTEXITCODE -eq 0) { echo 'it built'; } else { echo 'it failed'; }

I'm not sure why if ($?) didn't work for me, but this one did.

1
  • 1
    Checking $LASTEXITCODE is indeed the most robust approach, because, unfortunately, $? can yield false negatives with 2> redirections; see this answer.
    – mklement0
    Jun 11, 2021 at 16:21
0

Use:

if (start-process filename1.exe) {} else {start-process filename2.exe}

It's a little longer than "&&", but it accomplishes the same thing without scripting and is not too hard to remember.

1
  • 2
    Start-Process is the wrong tool to use for invoking command-line utilities in general. Specifically, as used here, Start-Process runs filename1.exe asynchronously in a new console window and returns nothing, which in a Boolean context evaluates to $false. Even if you omitted Start-Process (which is how you should invoke command-line utilities - directly), the approach would fall short, because the outcome of the conditional then depends on whether the utility produced any stdout output, which has no guaranteed relationship with whether it succeeded or not.
    – mklement0
    Jan 21, 2017 at 19:35
0

I think a simple if statement can accomplish this. Once I saw mkelement0's response that the last exit status is stored in $?, I put the following together:

# Set the first command to a variable
$a=somecommand

# Temporary variable to store exit status of the last command (since we can't write to "$?")
$test=$?

# Run the test
if ($test=$true) { 2nd-command }

So for the OP's example, it would be:

a=(csc /t:exe /out:a.exe SomeFile.cs); $test = $?; if ($test=$true) { a.exe }
0

I also have faced the same issue. The cause is that I am using an old version of powershell (I am already on Windows 11). To check version type this in powershell: $PSVersionTable

I found I was actually using version 5, while the latest is 7.4.

PSVersion                      5.1.22621.963
PSEdition                      Desktop

After install the latest (you can download separately or just go Microsoft Store), And ensure you have successfully switched to new version (you may need to extra config to choose this version, as it install new version not replacing old one)

PSVersion                      7.3.2
PSEdition                      Core

After I switch to the latest version, && works perfectly.

-1

It depends on the context, but here's an example of "-and" in action:

get-childitem | where-object { $_.Name.StartsWith("f") -and $_.Length -gt 10kb }

So that's getting all the files bigger than 10kb in a directory whose filename starts with "f".

1
  • 2
    This is not an answer to the original question, which is about executing multiple commands.
    – bdukes
    Jan 29, 2014 at 19:47
-2

We can try this command instead of using && method:

try {hostname; if ($lastexitcode -eq 0) {ipconfig /all | findstr /i bios}} catch {echo err} finally {}
2
  • There is no need for try / catch, because it is only needed for terminating errors, which external utilities such as hostname, ipconfig and findstr cannot trigger. Checking $LASTEXITCODE is only needed if you want to know the specific exit code set by an external utility - abstract success or failure is reflected in $?, just as with native cmdlets.
    – mklement0
    Jan 21, 2017 at 18:46
  • I think @Cyberiron is on the right track. I think && in Unix is a lot like try/catch in that it doesn't require you to wrap subsequent commands in a new block (i.e. }) when you short-circuit later commands (skip them). I think a AmpAmp function/filter that throws when if (!?) { throw "last command failed" } would be a very useful replacement for porting && to PowerShell. usage: csc /t:exe /out:a.exe SomeFile.cs; AmpAmp; a.exe
    – yzorg
    Dec 20, 2018 at 17:23

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.