This tip will show you how to write the output of a command at the Windows command line to a file. It’s not hard (infact it’s one of the very basics of command line programming).

Start Command Line within Windows by choosing Start->Run then entering ‘cmd’ and pressing enter.

Suppose you want to capture the output from a directory listing, say c:\blah. To get the directory listing to display on the screen you would type the command dir c:\blah which may generate the output:

C:\>dir c:\blah

Volume in drive C is Windows
Volume Serial Number is XXXX-YYYY

Directory of c:\blah

07/01/2006 21:08 <DIR> .
07/01/2006 21:08 <DIR> ..
07/01/2006 21:07 <DIR> folder1
07/01/2006 21:07 <DIR> folder2
06/03/2005 11:58 5,442,634 music.mp3
07/01/2006 21:07 17 text1.txt
2 File(s) 5,442,651 bytes
4 Dir(s) 12,453,460,480 bytes free

If you want to capture this listing to the file c:\folder.txt then you would append > c:\folder.txt to the original command, ie:
C:\>dir c:\blah > c:\folder.txt

Notice now that nothing appears on the command line window after this and it simply moves on to the next prompt. If we now check the file c:\folder.txt then we see that it has the contents of the directory.

A slight variant of this is to use the greater than symbol, >, twice, ie:

C:\>dir c:\blah >> c:\folder.txt

This will append the output of the dir command to what is already contained in the file c:\folder.txt.

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2 Responses to “Output redirection to a file from the Windows Command Line”  

  1. Gravatar Icon 1 Ankit Dangi

    Good one buddy, I was just looking for this small tip and found it here. Thanks.

  2. Gravatar Icon 2 tedsec

    Same here…thanks for the quick tip. It was useful

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