I'm trying to use the command prompt to move some files,
I am used to the linux terminal where I use ~
to specify the my home directory
I've looked everywhere but I couldn't seem to find it for windows command prompt (Documents and Settings\[user]
)
11 Answers
You can use %homedrive%%homepath%
environment variable to accomplish this.
The two command variables when concatenated gives you the desired user's home directory path as below:
Running
echo %homedrive%
on command prompt gives:C:
Running
echo %homepath%
on command prompt gives:\Users\<CurrentUserName>
When used together it becomes:
C:\Users\<CurrentUserName>
Update - better version 18th July 2019.
Final summary, even though I've moved on to powershell for most windows console work anyway, but I decided to wrap this old cmd issue up, I had to get on a cmd console today, and the lack of this feature really struck me. This one finally works with spaces as well, where my previous answer would fail.
In addition, this one now is also able to use ~ as a prefix for other home sub-folders too, and it swaps forward-slashes to back-slashes as well. So here it is;
Step 1. Create these doskey macros, somewhere they get picked up every time cmd starts up.
DOSKEY cd=cdtilde.bat $*
DOSKEY cd~=chdir /D "%USERPROFILE%"
DOSKEY cd..=chdir ..
Step 2. Create the cdtilde.bat file and put it somewhere in your PATH
@echo off
set dirname=""
set dirname=%*
set orig_dirname=%*
:: remove quotes - will re-attach later.
set dirname=%dirname:\"=%
set dirname=%dirname:/"=%
set dirname=%dirname:"=%
:: restore dirnames that contained only "/"
if "%dirname%"=="" set dirname=%orig_dirname:"=%
:: strip trailing slash, if longer than 3
if defined dirname if NOT "%dirname:~3%"=="" (
if "%dirname:~-1%"=="\" set dirname="%dirname:~0,-1%"
if "%dirname:~-1%"=="/" set dirname="%dirname:~0,-1%"
)
set dirname=%dirname:"=%
:: if starts with ~, then replace ~ with userprofile path
if %dirname:~0,1%==~ (
set dirname="%USERPROFILE%%dirname:~1%"
)
set dirname=%dirname:"=%
:: replace forward-slashes with back-slashes
set dirname="%dirname:/=\%"
set dirname=%dirname:"=%
chdir /D "%dirname%"
Tested fine with;
cd ~ (traditional habit)
cd~ (shorthand version)
cd.. (shorthand for going up..)
cd / (eg, root of C:)
cd ~/.config (eg, the .config folder under my home folder)
cd /Program Files (eg, "C:\Program Files")
cd C:/Program Files (eg, "C:\Program Files")
cd \Program Files (eg, "C:\Program Files")
cd C:\Program Files (eg, "C:\Program Files")
cd "C:\Program Files (eg, "C:\Program Files")
cd "C:\Program Files" (eg, "C:\Program Files")
Oh, also it allows lazy quoting, which I found useful, even when spaces are in the folder path names, since it wraps all of the arguments as if it was one long string. Which means just an initial quote also works, or completely without quotes also works.
All other stuff below may be ignored now, it is left for historical reasons - so I dont make the same mistakes again
old update 19th Oct 2018.
In case anyone else tried my approach, my original answer below didn't handle spaces, eg, the following failed.
> cd "c:\Program Files"
Files""]==["~"] was unexpected at this time.
I think there must be a way to solve that. Will post again if I can improve my answer. (see above, I finally got it all working the way I wanted it to.)
My Original Answer, still needed work... 7th Oct 2018.
I was just trying to do it today, and I think I got it, this is what I think works well;
First, some doskey macros;
DOSKEY cd=cdtilde.bat $*
DOSKEY cd~=chdir /D "%USERPROFILE%"
DOSKEY cd..=chdir ..
and then then a bat file in my path;
cdtilde.bat
@echo off
if ["%1"]==["~"] (
chdir /D "%USERPROFILE%"
) else (
chdir /D %*
)
All these seem to work fine;
cd ~ (traditional habit)
cd~ (shorthand version)
cd.. (shorthand for going up..)