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January 30, 2021 19:18
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Displays, sets, or removes cmd.exe environment variables. | |
SET [variable=[string]] | |
variable Specifies the environment-variable name. | |
string Specifies a series of characters to assign to the variable. | |
Type SET without parameters to display the current environment variables. | |
If Command Extensions are enabled SET changes as follows: | |
SET command invoked with just a variable name, no equal sign or value | |
will display the value of all variables whose prefix matches the name | |
given to the SET command. For example: | |
SET P | |
would display all variables that begin with the letter 'P' | |
SET command will set the ERRORLEVEL to 1 if the variable name is not | |
found in the current environment. | |
SET command will not allow an equal sign to be part of the name of | |
a variable. | |
Two new switches have been added to the SET command: | |
SET /A expression | |
SET /P variable=[promptString] | |
The /A switch specifies that the string to the right of the equal sign | |
is a numerical expression that is evaluated. The expression evaluator | |
is pretty simple and supports the following operations, in decreasing | |
order of precedence: | |
() - grouping | |
! ~ - - unary operators | |
* / % - arithmetic operators | |
+ - - arithmetic operators | |
<< >> - logical shift | |
& - bitwise and | |
^ - bitwise exclusive or | |
| - bitwise or | |
= *= /= %= += -= - assignment | |
&= ^= |= <<= >>= | |
, - expression separator | |
If you use any of the logical or modulus operators, you will need to | |
enclose the expression string in quotes. Any non-numeric strings in the | |
expression are treated as environment variable names whose values are | |
converted to numbers before using them. If an environment variable name | |
is specified but is not defined in the current environment, then a value | |
of zero is used. This allows you to do arithmetic with environment | |
variable values without having to type all those % signs to get their | |
values. If SET /A is executed from the command line outside of a | |
command script, then it displays the final value of the expression. The | |
assignment operator requires an environment variable name to the left of | |
the assignment operator. Numeric values are decimal numbers, unless | |
prefixed by 0x for hexadecimal numbers, and 0 for octal numbers. | |
So 0x12 is the same as 18 is the same as 022. Please note that the octal | |
notation can be confusing: 08 and 09 are not valid numbers because 8 and | |
9 are not valid octal digits. | |
The /P switch allows you to set the value of a variable to a line of input | |
entered by the user. Displays the specified promptString before reading | |
the line of input. The promptString can be empty. | |
Environment variable substitution has been enhanced as follows: | |
%PATH:str1=str2% | |
would expand the PATH environment variable, substituting each occurrence | |
of "str1" in the expanded result with "str2". "str2" can be the empty | |
string to effectively delete all occurrences of "str1" from the expanded | |
output. "str1" can begin with an asterisk, in which case it will match | |
everything from the beginning of the expanded output to the first | |
occurrence of the remaining portion of str1. | |
May also specify substrings for an expansion. | |
%PATH:~10,5% | |
would expand the PATH environment variable, and then use only the 5 | |
characters that begin at the 11th (offset 10) character of the expanded | |
result. If the length is not specified, then it defaults to the | |
remainder of the variable value. If either number (offset or length) is | |
negative, then the number used is the length of the environment variable | |
value added to the offset or length specified. | |
%PATH:~-10% | |
would extract the last 10 characters of the PATH variable. | |
%PATH:~0,-2% | |
would extract all but the last 2 characters of the PATH variable. | |
Finally, support for delayed environment variable expansion has been | |
added. This support is always disabled by default, but may be | |
enabled/disabled via the /V command line switch to CMD.EXE. See CMD /? | |
Delayed environment variable expansion is useful for getting around | |
the limitations of the current expansion which happens when a line | |
of text is read, not when it is executed. The following example | |
demonstrates the problem with immediate variable expansion: | |
set VAR=before | |
if "%VAR%" == "before" ( | |
set VAR=after | |
if "%VAR%" == "after" @echo If you see this, it worked | |
) | |
would never display the message, since the %VAR% in BOTH IF statements | |
is substituted when the first IF statement is read, since it logically | |
includes the body of the IF, which is a compound statement. So the | |
IF inside the compound statement is really comparing "before" with | |
"after" which will never be equal. Similarly, the following example | |
will not work as expected: | |
set LIST= | |
for %i in (*) do set LIST=%LIST% %i | |
echo %LIST% | |
in that it will NOT build up a list of files in the current directory, | |
but instead will just set the LIST variable to the last file found. | |
Again, this is because the %LIST% is expanded just once when the | |
FOR statement is read, and at that time the LIST variable is empty. | |
So the actual FOR loop we are executing is: | |
for %i in (*) do set LIST= %i | |
which just keeps setting LIST to the last file found. | |
Delayed environment variable expansion allows you to use a different | |
character (the exclamation mark) to expand environment variables at | |
execution time. If delayed variable expansion is enabled, the above | |
examples could be written as follows to work as intended: | |
set VAR=before | |
if "%VAR%" == "before" ( | |
set VAR=after | |
if "!VAR!" == "after" @echo If you see this, it worked | |
) | |
set LIST= | |
for %i in (*) do set LIST=!LIST! %i | |
echo %LIST% | |
If Command Extensions are enabled, then there are several dynamic | |
environment variables that can be expanded but which don't show up in | |
the list of variables displayed by SET. These variable values are | |
computed dynamically each time the value of the variable is expanded. | |
If the user explicitly defines a variable with one of these names, then | |
that definition will override the dynamic one described below: | |
%CD% - expands to the current directory string. | |
%DATE% - expands to current date using same format as DATE command. | |
%TIME% - expands to current time using same format as TIME command. | |
%RANDOM% - expands to a random decimal number between 0 and 32767. | |
%ERRORLEVEL% - expands to the current ERRORLEVEL value | |
%CMDEXTVERSION% - expands to the current Command Processor Extensions | |
version number. | |
%CMDCMDLINE% - expands to the original command line that invoked the | |
Command Processor. | |
%HIGHESTNUMANODENUMBER% - expands to the highest NUMA node number | |
on this machine. |
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