There has been variants of this question asked for generations, but despite writing some quite complicated Windows scripts, I can't seem to find out how to make them actually silent.
The following is an excerpt from one of my current scripts:
@ECHO OFF
SET scriptDirectory=%~dp0
COPY %scriptDirectory%test.bat %scriptDirectory%test2.bat
FOR /F %%f IN ('dir /B "%scriptDirectory%*.noext"') DO (
del "%scriptDirectory%%%f"
)
ECHO
The result of this is:
C:\Temp> test.bat
1 file(s) copied.
File Not Found
Echo is off.
C:\Temp>
Whereas the "1 file(s) copied." is just annoying, the "File Not Found" makes the user think that something has gone wrong (which it hasn't - no files is fine).
To suppress output, use redirection to NUL
.
There are two kinds of output that console commands use:
standard output, or stdout
,
standard error, or stderr
.
Of the two, stdout
is used more often, both by internal commands, like copy
, and by console utilities, or external commands, like find
and others, as well as by third-party console programs.
>NUL
suppresses the standard output and works fine e.g. for suppressing the 1 file(s) copied.
message of the copy
command. An alternative syntax is 1>NUL
. So,
COPY file1 file2 >NUL
or
COPY file1 file2 1>NUL
or
>NUL COPY file1 file2
or
1>NUL COPY file1 file2
suppresses all of COPY
's standard output.
To suppress error messages, which are typically printed to stderr
, use 2>NUL
instead. So, to suppress a File Not Found
message that DEL
prints when, well, the specified file is not found, just add 2>NUL
either at the beginning or at the end of the command line:
DEL file 2>NUL
or
2>NUL DEL file
Although sometimes it may be a better idea to actually verify whether the file exists before trying to delete it, like you are doing in your own solution. Note, however, that you don't need to delete the files one by one, using a loop. You can use a single command to delete the lot:
IF EXIST "%scriptDirectory%*.noext" DEL "%scriptDirectory%*.noext"
If you want that all normal output of your Batch script be silent (like in your example), the easiest way to do that is to run the Batch file with a redirection:
C:\Temp> test.bat >nul
This method does not require to modify a single line in the script and it still show error messages in the screen. To supress all the output, including error messages:
C:\Temp> test.bat >nul 2>&1
If your script have lines that produce output you want to appear in screen, perhaps will be simpler to add redirection to those lineas instead of all the lines you want to keep silent:
@ECHO OFF
SET scriptDirectory=%~dp0
COPY %scriptDirectory%test.bat %scriptDirectory%test2.bat
FOR /F %%f IN ('dir /B "%scriptDirectory%*.noext"') DO (
del "%scriptDirectory%%%f"
)
ECHO
REM Next line DO appear in the screen
ECHO Script completed >con
Antonio
Just add a >NUL
at the end of the lines producing the messages.
For example,
COPY %scriptDirectory%test.bat %scriptDirectory%test2.bat >NUL
You can redirect stdout to nul
to hide it.
COPY %scriptDirectory%test.bat %scriptDirectory%test2.bat >nul
Just add >nul
to the commands you want to hide the output from.
Here you can see all the different ways of redirecting the std streams.
Copies a directory named html & all its contents to a destination directory in silent mode.
If the destination directory is not present it will still create it.
@echo off
TITLE Copy Folder with Contents
set SOURCE=C:\labs
set DESTINATION=C:\Users\MyUser\Desktop\html
xcopy %SOURCE%\html\* %DESTINATION%\* /s /e /i /Y >NUL
/S Copies directories and subdirectories except empty ones.
/E Copies directories and subdirectories, including empty
ones. Same as /S /E. May be used to modify /T.
/I If destination does not exist and copying more than one
file, assumes that destination must be a directory.
- /Y Suppresses prompting to confirm you want to overwrite
an
existing destination file.