Basically, I know I can go through my control panel and modify the path variable. But, I'm wondering if there is a way to through batch programming have a temporary path included? That way it is only used during that batch file execution. I don't want to have people go in and modify their path variables just to use my batch file.
3 Answers
Just like any other environment variable, with SET
:
SET PATH=%PATH%;c:\whatever\else
If you want to have a little safety check built in first, check to see if the new path exists first:
IF EXIST c:\whatever\else SET PATH=%PATH%;c:\whatever\else
If you want that to be local to that batch file, use setlocal
:
setlocal
set PATH=...
set OTHERTHING=...
@REM Rest of your script
Read the docs carefully for setlocal
/endlocal
, and have a look at the other references on that site - Functions is pretty interesting too and the syntax is tricky.
The Syntax page should get you started with the basics.
-
5If you add a
setlocal
to your batch file, the path is only visible in the file– jebJul 26, 2011 at 16:50 -
-
@micheal: updated my answer with links. Please read some documentation/examples/tutorials about cmd scripting -
SET
is really something you should know and understand before you do any scripting.– MatJul 26, 2011 at 21:13 -
2Life saver. I needed to add an EV on a server that couldn't be restarted and this allows me to do what I need without having to schedule a restart!– dav_iAug 30, 2013 at 14:15
-
10Even without
SETLOCAL
it's, at most, only going to be for that individual command prompt session -- if you're doing this from more than one batch file, and usingEXIT /B %N%
, thenSETLOCAL
is basically just going to dump your changes when the script exits. :-/ Apr 3, 2014 at 18:29
There is an important detail:
set PATH="C:\linutils;C:\wingit\bin;%PATH%"
does not work, while
set PATH=C:\linutils;C:\wingit\bin;%PATH%
works. The difference is the quotes!
UPD also see the comment by venimus
-
12in fact it should be
SET "PATH=...%PATH%"
else spaces existing in path will cause errors or misbehavior. Wrapping in quotes like this will not include them but will properly set the variable. Same works for any other env variable.– venimusSep 2, 2019 at 11:04 -
Thank you @venimus for your comment. Both
set PATH=%PATH%;C:\newpath;
andset PATH="%PATH%;C:\newpath;"
didn't work, butset "PATH=%PATH%;C:\newpath;"
did.– BurhanDec 22, 2021 at 18:58
That's right, but it doesn't change it permanently, but just for current command prompt.
If you wanna to change it permanently you have to use for example this:
setx ENV_VAR_NAME "DESIRED_PATH" /m
This will change it permanently and yes, you can overwrite it in another batch script.
-
-
Works the same for me, but this Win Batch Scripting is little unfinished business from MS. In my company where we have all the same laptops with same system there is not a universal script for PATH setting and we are maintaining 2 or 3 of them, so whatever works for you :)– dumbakMar 4, 2014 at 9:40
-
Thanks for the update. In Windows Server 2012, when I put
/m
at the end, theDESIRED_PATH
was added with /m at the end for current user only. Mar 5, 2014 at 5:52 -
12A word of caution. Using setx on a path, trying to add more to it, and the string is > 1024 long, I discovered that the result (my environment PATH) was truncated permanently. (A good thing that I had could copy the %PATH% I had ECHOed out before the change, and put it back using the Environment variables windows tool.) May 29, 2015 at 10:23
-
2Attention! This command directly overwrite the System Environment Variable! I had deleted them and try to fix them. And also for anyone who did this mistake: do not restart your computer. Write
echo %path%
and you'll get the current loaded path. You need to distinguish the User and System environment variables from each other. Then you can manually apply them to the correct place.– AlperDec 4, 2019 at 13:08