I tried using a batch-script from this answer to color some text in the console.
Unfortunately I had some unintended behaviour, using ´3 :s
as string
for the call, which created a file named: "┬┤3 ", with a trailing whitespace.
Windows (10) (harddrive using NTFS) somehow can't handle a trailing whitespace in filenames, therefore I can't get rid of it.
I tried using delete
, rename
, move
in the Windows Explorer and Total Commander - all failed.
Using the command prompt: DEL
, MOVE
and others results in a "cannot find"
Using ATTRIB
outputs: "target of symbolic link "┬┤3 " does not exist"
To create such a file in you current directory:
SETLOCAL EnableDelayedExpansion
for /F "tokens=1,2 delims=#" %%a in ('"prompt #$H#$E# & echo on & for %%b in (1) do rem"') do (
set "DEL=%%a"
)
call :colorEcho 09 "´3 :s `"
exit
:colorEcho
echo off
<nul set /p ".=%DEL%" > "%~2"
findstr /v /a:%1 /R "^$" "%~2" nul
del "%~2" > nul 2>&1i
Win32 File Namespaces
To create the file in the batch script path:
To remove:
The
:s
is a NTFS stream suffix which can be omitted for the task of deleting the file.