What does ^& represent in Windows command line?
I've noticed the usage of ^&
in:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) ^& IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
I am wondering what does it do?
windows batch cmd.exe
New contributor
add a comment |
I've noticed the usage of ^&
in:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) ^& IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
I am wondering what does it do?
windows batch cmd.exe
New contributor
add a comment |
I've noticed the usage of ^&
in:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) ^& IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
I am wondering what does it do?
windows batch cmd.exe
New contributor
I've noticed the usage of ^&
in:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) ^& IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
I am wondering what does it do?
windows batch cmd.exe
windows batch cmd.exe
New contributor
New contributor
edited 2 hours ago
Twisty Impersonator
17.9k146495
17.9k146495
New contributor
asked 2 hours ago
Thrash AbaddonThrash Abaddon
1134
1134
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
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The ^
symbol is the escape character*:
Adding the escape character before a command symbol allows it to be treated as ordinary text.
When piping or redirecting any of these characters you should prefix with the escape character: & < > ^ |
Source
However, it is unnecessary in your command since it appears you want the IF command to be run after the RoboCopy command completes. Therefore this command is equivalent to the one you're using:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) & IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
*If ^
is the last character in a command, then it is interpreted as the command continuation character.
More Information:
- Command Redirection & Pipes
- How do I run two commands in one line in Windows CMD?
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.
– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The ^
symbol is the escape character*:
Adding the escape character before a command symbol allows it to be treated as ordinary text.
When piping or redirecting any of these characters you should prefix with the escape character: & < > ^ |
Source
However, it is unnecessary in your command since it appears you want the IF command to be run after the RoboCopy command completes. Therefore this command is equivalent to the one you're using:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) & IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
*If ^
is the last character in a command, then it is interpreted as the command continuation character.
More Information:
- Command Redirection & Pipes
- How do I run two commands in one line in Windows CMD?
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.
– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
add a comment |
The ^
symbol is the escape character*:
Adding the escape character before a command symbol allows it to be treated as ordinary text.
When piping or redirecting any of these characters you should prefix with the escape character: & < > ^ |
Source
However, it is unnecessary in your command since it appears you want the IF command to be run after the RoboCopy command completes. Therefore this command is equivalent to the one you're using:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) & IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
*If ^
is the last character in a command, then it is interpreted as the command continuation character.
More Information:
- Command Redirection & Pipes
- How do I run two commands in one line in Windows CMD?
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.
– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
add a comment |
The ^
symbol is the escape character*:
Adding the escape character before a command symbol allows it to be treated as ordinary text.
When piping or redirecting any of these characters you should prefix with the escape character: & < > ^ |
Source
However, it is unnecessary in your command since it appears you want the IF command to be run after the RoboCopy command completes. Therefore this command is equivalent to the one you're using:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) & IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
*If ^
is the last character in a command, then it is interpreted as the command continuation character.
More Information:
- Command Redirection & Pipes
- How do I run two commands in one line in Windows CMD?
The ^
symbol is the escape character*:
Adding the escape character before a command symbol allows it to be treated as ordinary text.
When piping or redirecting any of these characters you should prefix with the escape character: & < > ^ |
Source
However, it is unnecessary in your command since it appears you want the IF command to be run after the RoboCopy command completes. Therefore this command is equivalent to the one you're using:
(robocopy c:dirA c:dirB *.*) & IF %ERRORLEVEL% LSS 8 SET ERRORLEVEL = 0
*If ^
is the last character in a command, then it is interpreted as the command continuation character.
More Information:
- Command Redirection & Pipes
- How do I run two commands in one line in Windows CMD?
edited 2 hours ago
answered 2 hours ago
Twisty ImpersonatorTwisty Impersonator
17.9k146495
17.9k146495
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.
– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
add a comment |
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.
– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use
^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
@Biswapriyo That's also true, to use
^
for that purpose it must be the last character in the command.– Twisty Impersonator
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Thrash Abaddon is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thrash Abaddon is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thrash Abaddon is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thrash Abaddon is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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