Batch command date and time in file name

WindowsBatch FileCommand LineCmd

Windows Problem Overview


I am compressing files using WinZip on the command line. Since we archive on a daily basis, I am trying to add date and time to these files so that a new one is auto generated every time.

I use the following to generate a file name. Copy paste it to your command line and you should see a filename with a Date and Time component.

echo Archive_%date:~-4,4%%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2%_%time:~0,2%%time:~3,2%%time:~6,2%.zip

Output

Archive_20111011_ 93609.zip

However, my issue is AM vs PM. The AM time stamp gives me time 9 (with a leading blank space) vs. 10 naturally taking up the two spaces.

I guess my issue will extend to the first nine days, first 9 months, etc. as well.

How do I fix this so that leading zeroes are included instead of leading blank spaces so I get Archive_20111011_093609.zip?

Windows Solutions


Solution 1 - Windows

Another solution:

for /f "tokens=2 delims==" %%I in ('wmic os get localdatetime /format:list') do set datetime=%%I

It will give you (independent of locale settings!):

  20130802203023.304000+120
( YYYYMMDDhhmmss.<milliseconds><always 000>+/-<minutes difference to UTC>  )

From here, it is easy:

set datetime=%datetime:~0,8%-%datetime:~8,6%
20130802-203023

For Logan's request for the same outputformat for the "date-time modified" of a file:

for %%F in (test.txt) do set file=%%~fF
for /f "tokens=2 delims==" %%I in ('wmic datafile where name^="%file:\=\\%" get lastmodified /format:list') do set datetime=%%I
echo %datetime%

It is a bit more complicated, because it works only with full paths, wmic expects the backslashes to be doubled and the = has to be escaped (the first one. The second one is protected by surrounding quotes).

Solution 2 - Windows

Extract the hour, look for a leading space, if found replace with a zero;

set hr=%time:~0,2%
if "%hr:~0,1%" equ " " set hr=0%hr:~1,1%
echo Archive_%date:~-4,4%%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2%_%hr%%time:~3,2%%time:~6,2%.zip

Solution 3 - Windows

> You should search; you can simply replace all spaces with zero set hr=%hr: =0%jeb Oct 11 '11 at 14:16

So I did:

set hr=%time:~0,2%
set hr=%hr: =0%

Then use %hr% inside whatever string you are formatting to always get a two-digit hour.

(Jeb's comment under the most popular answer worked the best for me and is the simplest. I repost it here to make it more obvious for future users.)

Solution 4 - Windows

As Vicky already pointed out, %DATE% and %TIME% return the current date and time using the short date and time formats that are fully (endlessly) customizable.

One user may configure its system to return Fri040811 08.03PM while another user may choose 08/04/2011 20:30.

It's a complete nightmare for a BAT programmer.

Changing the format to a firm format may fix the problem, provided you restore back the previous format before leaving the BAT file. But it may be subject to nasty race conditions and complicate recovery in cancelled BAT files.

Fortunately, there is an alternative.

You may use WMIC, instead. WMIC Path Win32_LocalTime Get Day,Hour,Minute,Month,Second,Year /Format:table returns the date and time in a invariable way. Very convenient to directly parse it with a FOR /F command.

So, putting the pieces together, try this as a starting point...

SETLOCAL enabledelayedexpansion
FOR /F "skip=1 tokens=1-6" %%A IN ('WMIC Path Win32_LocalTime Get Day^,Hour^,Minute^,Month^,Second^,Year /Format:table') DO (
  SET /A FD=%%F*1000000+%%D*100+%%A
  SET /A FT=10000+%%B*100+%%C
  SET FT=!FT:~-4!
  ECHO Archive_!FD!_!FT!.zip
 )

Solution 5 - Windows

I found the best solution for me, after reading all your answers:

set t=%date%_%time%
set d=%t:~10,4%%t:~7,2%%t:~4,2%_%t:~15,2%%t:~18,2%%t:~21,2%
echo hello>"Archive_%d%"

If AM I get 20160915_ 150101 (with a leading space and time).

If PM I get 20160915_2150101.

Solution 6 - Windows

@For /F "tokens=1,2,3,4 delims=/ " %%A in ('Date /t') do @(

Set DayW=%%A

Set Day=%%B

Set Month=%%C


Set Year=%%D


Set All=%%D%%B%%C
)
"C:\Windows\CWBZIP.EXE" "c:\transfer\ziptest%All%.zip" "C:\transfer\MB5L.txt"

This takes MB5L.txt and compresses it to ziptest20120204.zip if run on 4 Feb 2012

Solution 7 - Windows

You can add leading zeroes to a variable (value up to 99) like this in batch: IF 1%Var% LSS 100 SET Var=0%Var%

So you'd need to parse your date and time components out into separate variables, treat them all like this, then concatenate them back together to create the file name.

However, your underlying method for parsing date and time is dependent on system locale settings. If you're happy for your code not to be portable to other machines, that's probably fine, but if you expect it to work in different international contexts then you'll need a different approach, for example by reading out the registry settings:

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\International\iDate
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\International\iTime
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\International\iTLZero

(That last one controls whether there is a leading zero on times, but not dates as far as I know).

Solution 8 - Windows

From the answer above, I have made a ready-to-use function.

Validated with french local settings.

:::::::: PROGRAM ::::::::::

call:genname "my file 1.txt"
echo "%newname%"
call:genname "my file 2.doc"
echo "%newname%"

echo.&pause&goto:eof
:::::::: FUNCTIONS :::::::::

:genname
	set d1=%date:~-4,4%
	set d2=%date:~-10,2%
	set d3=%date:~-7,2%
	set t1=%time:~0,2%
	::if "%t1:~0,1%" equ " " set t1=0%t1:~1,1%
	set t1=%t1: =0%
	set t2=%time:~3,2%
	set t3=%time:~6,2%
	set filename=%~1
	set newname=%d1%%d2%%d3%_%t1%%t2%%t3%-%filename%
goto:eof

Solution 9 - Windows

As others have already pointed out, the date and time formats of %DATE% and %TIME% (as well as date /T and time /T) are locale-dependent, so extracting the current date and time is always a nightmare, and it is impossible to get a solution that works with all possible formats since there are hardly any format limitations.


But there is another problem with a code like the following one (let us assume a date format like MM/DD/YYYY and a 12 h time format like h:mm:ss.ff ap where ap is either AM or PM and ff are fractional seconds):

rem // Resolve AM/PM time:
set "HOUR=%TIME:~,2%"
if "%TIME:~-2%" == "PM" if %HOUR% lss 12 set /A "HOUR+=12"
if "%TIME:~-2%" == "AM" if %HOUR% equ 12 set /A "HOUR-=12"
rem // Left-zero-pad hour:
set "HOUR=0%HOUR%"
rem // Build and display date/time string:
echo %DATE:~-4,4%%DATE:~0,2%%DATE:~3,2%_%HOUR:~-2%%TIME:~3,2%%TIME:~6,2%

Each instance of %DATE% and %TIME% returns the date or time value present at the time of its expansion, therefore the first %DATE% or %TIME% expression might return a different value than the following ones (you can prove that when echoing a long string containing a huge amount of such, preferrably %TIME%, expressions).

You could improve the aforementioned code to hold a single instance of %DATE% and %TIME% like this:

rem // Store current date and time once in the same line:
set "CURRDATE=%DATE%" & set "CURRTIME=%TIME%"
rem // Resolve AM/PM time:
set "HOUR=%CURRTIME:~,2%"
if "%CURRTIME:~-2%" == "PM" if %HOUR% lss 12 set /A "HOUR+=12"
if "%CURRTIME:~-2%" == "AM" if %HOUR% equ 12 set /A "HOUR-=12"
rem // Left-zero-pad hour:
set "HOUR=0%HOUR%"
rem // Build and display date/time string:
echo %CURRDATE:~-4,4%%CURRDATE:~0,2%%CURRDATE:~3,2%_%HOUR:~-2%%CURRTIME:~3,2%%CURRTIME:~6,2%

But still, the returned values in %DATE% and %TIME% could reflect different days when executed at midnight.

The only way to have the same day in %CURRDATE% and %CURRTIME% is this:

rem // Store current date and time once in the same line:
set "CURRDATE=%DATE%" & set "CURRTIME=%TIME%"
rem // Resolve AM/PM time:
set "HOUR=%CURRTIME:~,2%"
if "%CURRTIME:~-2%" == "PM" if %HOUR% lss 12 set /A "HOUR+=12"
if "%CURRTIME:~-2%" == "AM" if %HOUR% equ 12 set /A "HOUR-=12"
rem // Fix date/time midnight discrepancy:
if not "%CURRDATE%" == "%DATE%" if %CURRTIME:~0,2% equ 0 set "CURRDATE=%DATE%"
rem // Left-zero-pad hour:
set "HOUR=0%HOUR%"
rem // Build and display date/time string:
echo %CURRDATE:~-4,4%%CURRDATE:~0,2%%CURRDATE:~3,2%_%HOUR:~-2%%CURRTIME:~3,2%%CURRTIME:~6,2%

Of course the occurrence of the described problem is quite improbable, but at one point it will happen and cause strange unexplainable failures.


The described problem cannot occur with the approaches based on the wmic command as described in the answer by user Stephan and in the answer by user PA., so I strongly recommend to go for one of them. The only disadvantage of wmic is that it is way slower.

Solution 10 - Windows

Your question seems to be solved, but ...

I'm not sure if you take the right solution for your problem.
I suppose you try to compress each day the actual project code.

It's possible with ZIP and 1980 this was a good solution, but today you should use a repository system, like subversion or git or ..., but not a zip-file.

Ok, perhaps it could be that I'm wrong.

Solution 11 - Windows

I realise this is a moot question to the OP, but I just brewed this, and I'm a tad proud of myself for thinking outside the box.

Download gawk for Windows at http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/gawk.htm .... Then it's a one liner, without all that clunky DOS batch syntax, where it takes six FOR loops to split the strings (WTF? That's really really BAD MAD AND SAD! ... IMHO of course)

If you already know C, C++, Perl, or Ruby then picking-up AWK (which inherits from the former two, and contributes significantly to the latter two) is a piece of the proverbial CAKE!!!

The DOS Batch command:

echo %DATE% %TIME% && echo %DATE% %TIME% | gawk -F"[ /:.]" "{printf(""""%s%02d%02d-%02d%02d%02d\n"""", $4, $3, $2, $5, $6, $7);}"

Prints:

Tue 04/09/2012 10:40:38.25
20120904-104038

Now that's not quite the full story... I'm just going to be lazy and hard-code the rest of my log-file-name in the printf statement, because it's simple... But if anybody knows how to set a %NOW% variable to AWK's output (yeilding the guts of a "generic" now function) then I'm all ears.


EDIT:

A quick search on Stack Overflow filled in that last piece of the puzzle, Batch equivalent of Bash backticks.

So, these three lines of DOS batch:

echo %DATE% %TIME% | awk -F"[ /:.]" "{printf(""""%s%02d%02d-%02d%02d%02d\n"""", $4, $3, $2, $5, $6, $7);}" >%temp%\now.txt
set /p now=<%temp%\now.txt
echo %now%

Produce:

20120904-114434

So now I can include a datetime in the name of the log-file produced by my SQL Server installation (2005+) script thus:

sqlcmd -S .\SQLEXPRESS -d MyDb -e -i MyTSqlCommands.sql >MyTSqlCommands.sql.%now%.log

And I'm a happy camper again (except life was still SOOOOO much easier on Unix).

Solution 12 - Windows

I prever to use this over the current accepted answer from Stephan as it makes it possible to configure the timestamp using named parameters after that:

for /f %%x in ('wmic path win32_utctime get /format:list ^| findstr "="') do set %%x

It will provide the following parameters:

  • Day
  • DayOfWeek
  • Hour
  • Milliseconds
  • Minute
  • Month
  • Quarter
  • Second
  • WeekInMonth
  • Year

You can then configure your format like so:

SET DATE=%Year%%Month%%Day%

Solution 13 - Windows

So you want to generate date in format YYYYMMDD_hhmmss. As %date% and %time% formats are locale dependant you might need more robust ways to get a formatted date.

Here's one option:

@if (@X)==(@Y) @end /*
	@cscript //E:JScript //nologo "%~f0"
	@exit /b %errorlevel%
@end*/
var todayDate = new Date();
todayDate = "" + 
    todayDate.getFullYear() + 
    ("0" + (todayDate.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2) +
    ("0" + todayDate.getDate()).slice(-2) + 
    "_" + 
    ("0" + todayDate.getHours()).slice(-2) +
    ("0" + todayDate.getMinutes()).slice(-2) +
    ("0" + todayDate.getSeconds()).slice(-2) ;
WScript.Echo(todayDate);

and if you save the script as jsdate.bat you can assign it as a value :

for /f %%a in ('jsdate.bat') do @set "fdate=%%a"
echo %fdate%

or directly from command prompt:

for /f %a in ('jsdate.bat') do @set "fdate=%a"

Or you can use powershell which probably is the way that requires the less code:

for /f %%# in ('powershell Get-Date -Format "yyyyMMdd_HHmmss"') do set "fdate=%%#"

Solution 14 - Windows

Adding other options to this list of answers.

you could have replaced empty space with a 0 something like echo %time: =0%

but that is still dependent, move that code to a buddy's PC in some other random place and you'll get funny outputs. So you can incorporate powershell's Get-Date:

for /f "tokens=*" %%i in ('PowerShell -Command "Get-Date -format 'yyyymmdd_HHmmss'"') do echo %%i.zip"

Solution 15 - Windows

A space is legal in file names. If you put your path and file name in quotes, it may just fly. Here's what I'm using in a batch file:

svnadmin hotcopy "C:\SourcePath\Folder" "f:\DestPath\Folder%filename%"

It doesn't matter if there are spaces in %filename%.

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