%%f in a batch file with Windows 7 Professional 64 bit












0














I have a line like the following in a several batch files:



FOR %%f IN (%*) DO something.exe %%f


I've used them for a long time with no problem. I recently had to replace my hard drive and had Windows 7 reinstalled just as it was before as far as I know. Now when I run any of the batch files with this kind of line in it, they aren't pre-processing the "%*". So for something like "XXX.bat *.txt" I get:



Unable to open input file "*.txt"



I'm running Windows 7 as a virtual machine in Parallels, upgraded from version 8 to 10, if that makes a difference. They also upgraded my Mac OS from Mountain Lion to Yosemite.



Even more strange, this little batch file works fine:



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO start gvim %%f


But this one gives the message it can't find t? (where t? should parse out to t1, t2, and t3):



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO af2.exe %%f


And I tried adding the "start" to it, same results.



Maybe a simpler way of saying it is:



This works:



af2 2014A 2014B 2014C



But this:



af2 2014?



gives an error about trying to access a file called "2014?"



And af2 calls, for each file, a program I wrote and have used for 20+ years that just gives a few statistics on a file.










share|improve this question
























  • I've noticed also that %date% is now just a 2-digit year where it was 4 digits on my previous install. For example, it now shows "Thu 05/07/15" where before it would been "Thu 05/07/2015". Obviously, that's not directly related to the issue at hand, but I thought it might give someone a clue.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 17:54












  • %date% will simply use whatever short date format you've set under Region and Language in the Control Panel. Regarding your problem, from the same location if you try type filename.txt does it work? Wondering if it's some sort of permissions issue or something.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 18:32












  • If I do each file manually one at a time, it works fine. The batch file's just not parsing the * wildcard.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 22:39










  • Try fixing .BAT-related registry entries via the File Association Fixer, reboot and see if it works.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 23:40
















0














I have a line like the following in a several batch files:



FOR %%f IN (%*) DO something.exe %%f


I've used them for a long time with no problem. I recently had to replace my hard drive and had Windows 7 reinstalled just as it was before as far as I know. Now when I run any of the batch files with this kind of line in it, they aren't pre-processing the "%*". So for something like "XXX.bat *.txt" I get:



Unable to open input file "*.txt"



I'm running Windows 7 as a virtual machine in Parallels, upgraded from version 8 to 10, if that makes a difference. They also upgraded my Mac OS from Mountain Lion to Yosemite.



Even more strange, this little batch file works fine:



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO start gvim %%f


But this one gives the message it can't find t? (where t? should parse out to t1, t2, and t3):



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO af2.exe %%f


And I tried adding the "start" to it, same results.



Maybe a simpler way of saying it is:



This works:



af2 2014A 2014B 2014C



But this:



af2 2014?



gives an error about trying to access a file called "2014?"



And af2 calls, for each file, a program I wrote and have used for 20+ years that just gives a few statistics on a file.










share|improve this question
























  • I've noticed also that %date% is now just a 2-digit year where it was 4 digits on my previous install. For example, it now shows "Thu 05/07/15" where before it would been "Thu 05/07/2015". Obviously, that's not directly related to the issue at hand, but I thought it might give someone a clue.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 17:54












  • %date% will simply use whatever short date format you've set under Region and Language in the Control Panel. Regarding your problem, from the same location if you try type filename.txt does it work? Wondering if it's some sort of permissions issue or something.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 18:32












  • If I do each file manually one at a time, it works fine. The batch file's just not parsing the * wildcard.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 22:39










  • Try fixing .BAT-related registry entries via the File Association Fixer, reboot and see if it works.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 23:40














0












0








0







I have a line like the following in a several batch files:



FOR %%f IN (%*) DO something.exe %%f


I've used them for a long time with no problem. I recently had to replace my hard drive and had Windows 7 reinstalled just as it was before as far as I know. Now when I run any of the batch files with this kind of line in it, they aren't pre-processing the "%*". So for something like "XXX.bat *.txt" I get:



Unable to open input file "*.txt"



I'm running Windows 7 as a virtual machine in Parallels, upgraded from version 8 to 10, if that makes a difference. They also upgraded my Mac OS from Mountain Lion to Yosemite.



Even more strange, this little batch file works fine:



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO start gvim %%f


But this one gives the message it can't find t? (where t? should parse out to t1, t2, and t3):



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO af2.exe %%f


And I tried adding the "start" to it, same results.



Maybe a simpler way of saying it is:



This works:



af2 2014A 2014B 2014C



But this:



af2 2014?



gives an error about trying to access a file called "2014?"



And af2 calls, for each file, a program I wrote and have used for 20+ years that just gives a few statistics on a file.










share|improve this question















I have a line like the following in a several batch files:



FOR %%f IN (%*) DO something.exe %%f


I've used them for a long time with no problem. I recently had to replace my hard drive and had Windows 7 reinstalled just as it was before as far as I know. Now when I run any of the batch files with this kind of line in it, they aren't pre-processing the "%*". So for something like "XXX.bat *.txt" I get:



Unable to open input file "*.txt"



I'm running Windows 7 as a virtual machine in Parallels, upgraded from version 8 to 10, if that makes a difference. They also upgraded my Mac OS from Mountain Lion to Yosemite.



Even more strange, this little batch file works fine:



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO start gvim %%f


But this one gives the message it can't find t? (where t? should parse out to t1, t2, and t3):



@ECHO off
FOR %%f IN (%*) DO af2.exe %%f


And I tried adding the "start" to it, same results.



Maybe a simpler way of saying it is:



This works:



af2 2014A 2014B 2014C



But this:



af2 2014?



gives an error about trying to access a file called "2014?"



And af2 calls, for each file, a program I wrote and have used for 20+ years that just gives a few statistics on a file.







windows-7 command-line batch






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 19 at 0:16









barlop

15.3k2287145




15.3k2287145










asked May 6 '15 at 16:49









Gene

113




113












  • I've noticed also that %date% is now just a 2-digit year where it was 4 digits on my previous install. For example, it now shows "Thu 05/07/15" where before it would been "Thu 05/07/2015". Obviously, that's not directly related to the issue at hand, but I thought it might give someone a clue.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 17:54












  • %date% will simply use whatever short date format you've set under Region and Language in the Control Panel. Regarding your problem, from the same location if you try type filename.txt does it work? Wondering if it's some sort of permissions issue or something.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 18:32












  • If I do each file manually one at a time, it works fine. The batch file's just not parsing the * wildcard.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 22:39










  • Try fixing .BAT-related registry entries via the File Association Fixer, reboot and see if it works.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 23:40


















  • I've noticed also that %date% is now just a 2-digit year where it was 4 digits on my previous install. For example, it now shows "Thu 05/07/15" where before it would been "Thu 05/07/2015". Obviously, that's not directly related to the issue at hand, but I thought it might give someone a clue.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 17:54












  • %date% will simply use whatever short date format you've set under Region and Language in the Control Panel. Regarding your problem, from the same location if you try type filename.txt does it work? Wondering if it's some sort of permissions issue or something.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 18:32












  • If I do each file manually one at a time, it works fine. The batch file's just not parsing the * wildcard.
    – Gene
    May 7 '15 at 22:39










  • Try fixing .BAT-related registry entries via the File Association Fixer, reboot and see if it works.
    – Karan
    May 7 '15 at 23:40
















I've noticed also that %date% is now just a 2-digit year where it was 4 digits on my previous install. For example, it now shows "Thu 05/07/15" where before it would been "Thu 05/07/2015". Obviously, that's not directly related to the issue at hand, but I thought it might give someone a clue.
– Gene
May 7 '15 at 17:54






I've noticed also that %date% is now just a 2-digit year where it was 4 digits on my previous install. For example, it now shows "Thu 05/07/15" where before it would been "Thu 05/07/2015". Obviously, that's not directly related to the issue at hand, but I thought it might give someone a clue.
– Gene
May 7 '15 at 17:54














%date% will simply use whatever short date format you've set under Region and Language in the Control Panel. Regarding your problem, from the same location if you try type filename.txt does it work? Wondering if it's some sort of permissions issue or something.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 18:32






%date% will simply use whatever short date format you've set under Region and Language in the Control Panel. Regarding your problem, from the same location if you try type filename.txt does it work? Wondering if it's some sort of permissions issue or something.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 18:32














If I do each file manually one at a time, it works fine. The batch file's just not parsing the * wildcard.
– Gene
May 7 '15 at 22:39




If I do each file manually one at a time, it works fine. The batch file's just not parsing the * wildcard.
– Gene
May 7 '15 at 22:39












Try fixing .BAT-related registry entries via the File Association Fixer, reboot and see if it works.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 23:40




Try fixing .BAT-related registry entries via the File Association Fixer, reboot and see if it works.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 23:40










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














Command Extensions are disabled for some reason. The command extensions involve serious changes to Command Line arguments (Parameters) as per CALL /?.



However, next excerpt from CMD /? shows some solution hints:




Command Extensions are enabled by default. You may also disable
extensions for a particular invocation by using the /E:OFF switch.
You can enable or disable extensions for all invocations of CMD.EXE
on a machine and/or user logon session by setting either or both of
the following REG_DWORD values in the registry using REGEDIT.EXE:



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


and/or



HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


to either 0x1 or 0x0. The user specific setting takes precedence
over the machine setting. The command line switches take precedence
over the registry settings.



In a batch file, the SETLOCAL ENABLEEXTENSIONS or
DISABLEEXTENSIONS arguments takes precedence over the /E:ON or
/E:OFF switch. See SETLOCAL /? for details.




Example



==>type D:batcliParser.bat
@echo OFF >NUL
echo all %%* = %*
set /A "ii=0"
:loopfor
echo param %%%ii% = %0
SHIFT
set /A "ii+=1"
if not [%0]== goto :loopfor
goto :eof

==>D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
all %* = aaa bbb
param %0 = D:batcliParser.bat
param %1 = aaa
param %2 = bbb

==>cmd /E:OFF /C D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
all %* = *
The syntax of the command is incorrect.
param %3 = D:batcliParser.bat
The syntax of the command is incorrect.
param %3 = aaa
The syntax of the command is incorrect.
param %3 = bbb
The syntax of the command is incorrect.
The system cannot find the batch label specified - eof

==>





share|improve this answer























  • It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
    – Gene
    May 8 '15 at 15:23



















0














I figured out the problem. I have a folder on my desktop with a bunch of .exe files in them from programs I've written. It also has a folder with some .bat files in it. In many cases, the .bat file calls one of the .exe files that has the same root name (af2.bat calls af2.exe). That works fine IF the folder with the .bat files in it precedes the other folder in the PATH variable, which it did on my previous install (and does now on this one).



Just gotta love those subtle little problems.



Thanks for all the input. :)






share|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0














    Command Extensions are disabled for some reason. The command extensions involve serious changes to Command Line arguments (Parameters) as per CALL /?.



    However, next excerpt from CMD /? shows some solution hints:




    Command Extensions are enabled by default. You may also disable
    extensions for a particular invocation by using the /E:OFF switch.
    You can enable or disable extensions for all invocations of CMD.EXE
    on a machine and/or user logon session by setting either or both of
    the following REG_DWORD values in the registry using REGEDIT.EXE:



    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    and/or



    HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    to either 0x1 or 0x0. The user specific setting takes precedence
    over the machine setting. The command line switches take precedence
    over the registry settings.



    In a batch file, the SETLOCAL ENABLEEXTENSIONS or
    DISABLEEXTENSIONS arguments takes precedence over the /E:ON or
    /E:OFF switch. See SETLOCAL /? for details.




    Example



    ==>type D:batcliParser.bat
    @echo OFF >NUL
    echo all %%* = %*
    set /A "ii=0"
    :loopfor
    echo param %%%ii% = %0
    SHIFT
    set /A "ii+=1"
    if not [%0]== goto :loopfor
    goto :eof

    ==>D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = aaa bbb
    param %0 = D:batcliParser.bat
    param %1 = aaa
    param %2 = bbb

    ==>cmd /E:OFF /C D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = *
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = D:batcliParser.bat
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = aaa
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = bbb
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    The system cannot find the batch label specified - eof

    ==>





    share|improve this answer























    • It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
      – Gene
      May 8 '15 at 15:23
















    0














    Command Extensions are disabled for some reason. The command extensions involve serious changes to Command Line arguments (Parameters) as per CALL /?.



    However, next excerpt from CMD /? shows some solution hints:




    Command Extensions are enabled by default. You may also disable
    extensions for a particular invocation by using the /E:OFF switch.
    You can enable or disable extensions for all invocations of CMD.EXE
    on a machine and/or user logon session by setting either or both of
    the following REG_DWORD values in the registry using REGEDIT.EXE:



    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    and/or



    HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    to either 0x1 or 0x0. The user specific setting takes precedence
    over the machine setting. The command line switches take precedence
    over the registry settings.



    In a batch file, the SETLOCAL ENABLEEXTENSIONS or
    DISABLEEXTENSIONS arguments takes precedence over the /E:ON or
    /E:OFF switch. See SETLOCAL /? for details.




    Example



    ==>type D:batcliParser.bat
    @echo OFF >NUL
    echo all %%* = %*
    set /A "ii=0"
    :loopfor
    echo param %%%ii% = %0
    SHIFT
    set /A "ii+=1"
    if not [%0]== goto :loopfor
    goto :eof

    ==>D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = aaa bbb
    param %0 = D:batcliParser.bat
    param %1 = aaa
    param %2 = bbb

    ==>cmd /E:OFF /C D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = *
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = D:batcliParser.bat
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = aaa
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = bbb
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    The system cannot find the batch label specified - eof

    ==>





    share|improve this answer























    • It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
      – Gene
      May 8 '15 at 15:23














    0












    0








    0






    Command Extensions are disabled for some reason. The command extensions involve serious changes to Command Line arguments (Parameters) as per CALL /?.



    However, next excerpt from CMD /? shows some solution hints:




    Command Extensions are enabled by default. You may also disable
    extensions for a particular invocation by using the /E:OFF switch.
    You can enable or disable extensions for all invocations of CMD.EXE
    on a machine and/or user logon session by setting either or both of
    the following REG_DWORD values in the registry using REGEDIT.EXE:



    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    and/or



    HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    to either 0x1 or 0x0. The user specific setting takes precedence
    over the machine setting. The command line switches take precedence
    over the registry settings.



    In a batch file, the SETLOCAL ENABLEEXTENSIONS or
    DISABLEEXTENSIONS arguments takes precedence over the /E:ON or
    /E:OFF switch. See SETLOCAL /? for details.




    Example



    ==>type D:batcliParser.bat
    @echo OFF >NUL
    echo all %%* = %*
    set /A "ii=0"
    :loopfor
    echo param %%%ii% = %0
    SHIFT
    set /A "ii+=1"
    if not [%0]== goto :loopfor
    goto :eof

    ==>D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = aaa bbb
    param %0 = D:batcliParser.bat
    param %1 = aaa
    param %2 = bbb

    ==>cmd /E:OFF /C D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = *
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = D:batcliParser.bat
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = aaa
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = bbb
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    The system cannot find the batch label specified - eof

    ==>





    share|improve this answer














    Command Extensions are disabled for some reason. The command extensions involve serious changes to Command Line arguments (Parameters) as per CALL /?.



    However, next excerpt from CMD /? shows some solution hints:




    Command Extensions are enabled by default. You may also disable
    extensions for a particular invocation by using the /E:OFF switch.
    You can enable or disable extensions for all invocations of CMD.EXE
    on a machine and/or user logon session by setting either or both of
    the following REG_DWORD values in the registry using REGEDIT.EXE:



    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    and/or



    HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftCommand ProcessorEnableExtensions


    to either 0x1 or 0x0. The user specific setting takes precedence
    over the machine setting. The command line switches take precedence
    over the registry settings.



    In a batch file, the SETLOCAL ENABLEEXTENSIONS or
    DISABLEEXTENSIONS arguments takes precedence over the /E:ON or
    /E:OFF switch. See SETLOCAL /? for details.




    Example



    ==>type D:batcliParser.bat
    @echo OFF >NUL
    echo all %%* = %*
    set /A "ii=0"
    :loopfor
    echo param %%%ii% = %0
    SHIFT
    set /A "ii+=1"
    if not [%0]== goto :loopfor
    goto :eof

    ==>D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = aaa bbb
    param %0 = D:batcliParser.bat
    param %1 = aaa
    param %2 = bbb

    ==>cmd /E:OFF /C D:batcliParser.bat aaa bbb
    all %* = *
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = D:batcliParser.bat
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = aaa
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    param %3 = bbb
    The syntax of the command is incorrect.
    The system cannot find the batch label specified - eof

    ==>






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited May 8 '15 at 11:27

























    answered May 8 '15 at 10:23









    JosefZ

    7,16541543




    7,16541543












    • It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
      – Gene
      May 8 '15 at 15:23


















    • It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
      – Gene
      May 8 '15 at 15:23
















    It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
    – Gene
    May 8 '15 at 15:23




    It's very odd. All indications are that it's enabled for both local machine and current user. I added the setlocal enableextensions to a batch file with an error check to give me a message if it was unable to enable them. No error message and the batch file still does the exact same thing.
    – Gene
    May 8 '15 at 15:23













    0














    I figured out the problem. I have a folder on my desktop with a bunch of .exe files in them from programs I've written. It also has a folder with some .bat files in it. In many cases, the .bat file calls one of the .exe files that has the same root name (af2.bat calls af2.exe). That works fine IF the folder with the .bat files in it precedes the other folder in the PATH variable, which it did on my previous install (and does now on this one).



    Just gotta love those subtle little problems.



    Thanks for all the input. :)






    share|improve this answer


























      0














      I figured out the problem. I have a folder on my desktop with a bunch of .exe files in them from programs I've written. It also has a folder with some .bat files in it. In many cases, the .bat file calls one of the .exe files that has the same root name (af2.bat calls af2.exe). That works fine IF the folder with the .bat files in it precedes the other folder in the PATH variable, which it did on my previous install (and does now on this one).



      Just gotta love those subtle little problems.



      Thanks for all the input. :)






      share|improve this answer
























        0












        0








        0






        I figured out the problem. I have a folder on my desktop with a bunch of .exe files in them from programs I've written. It also has a folder with some .bat files in it. In many cases, the .bat file calls one of the .exe files that has the same root name (af2.bat calls af2.exe). That works fine IF the folder with the .bat files in it precedes the other folder in the PATH variable, which it did on my previous install (and does now on this one).



        Just gotta love those subtle little problems.



        Thanks for all the input. :)






        share|improve this answer












        I figured out the problem. I have a folder on my desktop with a bunch of .exe files in them from programs I've written. It also has a folder with some .bat files in it. In many cases, the .bat file calls one of the .exe files that has the same root name (af2.bat calls af2.exe). That works fine IF the folder with the .bat files in it precedes the other folder in the PATH variable, which it did on my previous install (and does now on this one).



        Just gotta love those subtle little problems.



        Thanks for all the input. :)







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered May 8 '15 at 16:59









        Gene

        113




        113






























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