How can I echo a newline in a batch file?

WindowsBatch FileNewline

Windows Problem Overview


How can you you insert a newline from your batch file output?

I want to do something like:

echo hello\nworld

Which would output:

hello
world

Windows Solutions


Solution 1 - Windows

Use:

echo hello
echo:
echo world

Solution 2 - Windows

echo hello & echo.world

This means you could define & echo. as a constant for a newline \n.

Solution 3 - Windows

Here you go, create a .bat file with the following in it :

@echo off
REM Creating a Newline variable (the two blank lines are required!)
set NLM=^


set NL=^^^%NLM%%NLM%^%NLM%%NLM%
REM Example Usage:
echo There should be a newline%NL%inserted here.

echo.
pause

You should see output like the following:

There should be a newline
inserted here.

Press any key to continue . . .

You only need the code between the REM statements, obviously.

Solution 4 - Windows

There is a standard feature echo: in cmd/bat-files to write blank line, which emulates a new line in your cmd-output:

@echo off
echo line1
echo:
echo line2

or

@echo line1 & echo: & echo line2

Output of cited above cmd-file:

line1

line2

Solution 5 - Windows

Like the answer of Ken, but with the use of the delayed expansion.

setlocal EnableDelayedExpansion
(set \n=^
%=Do not remove this line=%
)

echo Line1!\n!Line2
echo Works also with quotes "!\n!line2"

First a single linefeed character is created and assigned to the \n-variable.
This works as the caret at the line end tries to escape the next character, but if this is a Linefeed it is ignored and the next character is read and escaped (even if this is also a linefeed).
Then you need a third linefeed to end the current instruction, else the third line would be appended to the LF-variable.
Even batch files have line endings with CR/LF only the LF are important, as the CR's are removed in this phase of the parser.

The advantage of using the delayed expansion is, that there is no special character handling at all.
echo Line1%LF%Line2 would fail, as the parser stops parsing at single linefeeds.

More explanations are at
SO:Long commands split over multiple lines in Vista/DOS batch (.bat) file
SO:How does the Windows Command Interpreter (CMD.EXE) parse scripts?

Edit: Avoid echo.

This doesn't answer the question, as the question was about single echo that can output multiple lines.

But despite the other answers who suggests the use of echo. to create a new line, it should be noted that echo. is the worst, as it's very slow and it can completly fail, as cmd.exe searches for a file named ECHO and try to start it.

For printing just an empty line, you could use one of

echo,
echo;
echo(
echo/
echo+
echo=

But the use of echo., echo\ or echo: should be avoided, as they can be really slow, depending of the location where the script will be executed, like a network drive.

Solution 6 - Windows

echo. Enough said.

If you need it in a single line, use the &. For example,

echo Line 1 & echo. & echo line 3

would output as:

Line 1

line 3

Now, say you want something a bit fancier, ...

set n=^&echo.
echo hello %n% world

Outputs

hello
world

Then just throw in a %n% whenever you want a new line in an echo statement. This is more close to your \n used in various languages.

Breakdown

set n= sets the variable n equal to:

^ Nulls out the next symbol to follow:

& Means to do another command on the same line. We don't care about errorlevel(its an echo statement for crying out loud), so no && is needed.

echo. Continues the echo statement.

All of this works because you can actually create variables that are code, and use them inside of other commands. It is sort of like a ghetto function, since batch is not exactly the most advanced of shell scripting languages. This only works because batch's poor usage of variables, not designating between ints, chars, floats, strings, etc naturally.

If you are crafty, you could get this to work with other things. For example, using it to echo a tab

set t=^&echo.     ::there are spaces up to the double colon

Solution 7 - Windows

When echoing something to redirect to a file, multiple echo commands will not work. I think maybe the ">>" redirector is a good choice:

echo hello > temp
echo world >> temp

Solution 8 - Windows

If you need to put results to a file, you can use:

(echo a & echo: & echo b) > file_containing_multiple_lines.txt

Solution 9 - Windows

Just like Grimtron suggests - here is a quick example to define it:

@echo off
set newline=^& echo.
echo hello %newline%world

###Output

C:\>test.bat
hello
world

Solution 10 - Windows

You can also do like this,

(for %i in (a b "c d") do @echo %~i)

The output will be,

a
b
c d

Note that when this is put in a batch file, '%' shall be doubled.

(for %%i in (a b "c d") do @echo %%~i)

Solution 11 - Windows

If anybody comes here because they are looking to echo a blank line from a MINGW make makefile, I used

@cmd /c echo.

simply using echo. causes the dreaded process_begin: CreateProcess(NULL, echo., ...) failed. error message.

I hope this helps at least one other person out there :)

Solution 12 - Windows

Ken and Jeb solutions works well.

But the new lines are generated with only an LF character and I need CRLF characters (Windows version).

To this, at the end of the script, I have converted LF to CRLF.

Example:

TYPE file.txt | FIND "" /V > file_win.txt
del file.txt
rename file_win.txt file.txt

Solution 13 - Windows

If one needs to use famous \n in string literals that can be passed to a variable, may write a code like in the Hello.bat script below:

@echo off
set input=%1
if defined input (
	set answer=Hi!\nWhy did you call me a %input%?
) else (
	set answer=Hi!\nHow are you?\nWe are friends, you know?\nYou can call me by name.
)

setlocal enableDelayedExpansion
set newline=^


rem Two empty lines above are essential
echo %answer:\n=!newline!%

This way multiline output may by prepared in one place, even in other scritpt or external file, and printed in another.

The line break is held in newline variable. Its value must be substituted after the echo line is expanded so I use setlocal enableDelayedExpansion to enable exclamation signs which expand variables on execution. And the execution substitutes \n with newline contents (look for syntax at help set). We could of course use !newline! while setting the answer but \n is more convenient. It may be passed from outside (try Hello R2\nD2), where nobody knows the name of variable holding the line break (Yes, Hello C3!newline!P0 works the same way).

Above example may be refined to a subroutine or standalone batch, used like call:mlecho Hi\nI'm your comuter:

:mlecho
setlocal enableDelayedExpansion
set text=%*
set nl=^


echo %text:\n=!nl!%
goto:eof

Please note, that additional backslash won't prevent the script from parsing \n substring.

Solution 14 - Windows

After a sleepless night and after reading all answers herein, after reading a lot of SS64 > CMD and after a lot of try & error I found:

The (almost) Ultimate Solution

TL;DR

... for early adopters.

Important!
Use a text editor for C&P that supports Unicode, e.g. Notepad++!
Set Newline Environment Variable ...
... in the Current CMD Session
Important!
Do not edit anything between '=' and '^'! (There's a character in between though you don't see it. Neither here nor in edit mode. C&P works here.)
:: Sets newline variables in the current CMD session
set \n=​^&echo:
set nl=​^&echo:
... for the Current User
Important!
Do not edit anything between (the second) '' and '^'! (There's a character in between though you don't see it. Neither here nor in edit mode. C&P works here.)
:: Sets newline variables for the current user [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Environment]
setx \n ​^&echo:
setx nl ​^&echo:
... for the Local Machine
Important!
Do not edit anything between (the second) '' and '^'! (There's a character in between though you don't see it. Neither here nor in edit mode. C&P works here.)
:: Sets newline variables for the local machine [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment]
setx \n ​^&echo: /m 
setx nl ​^&echo: /m 

Why just almost?

It does not work with double-quotes that are not paired (opened and closed) in the same printed line, except if the only unpaired double-quote is the last character of the text, e.g.:

  • works: ""echo %\n%...after "newline". Before "newline"...%\n%...after "newline" (paired in each printed line)

  • works: echo %\n%...after newline. Before newline...%\n%...after newline" (the only unpaired double-quote is the last character)

  • doesn't work: echo "%\n%...after newline. Before newline...%\n%...after newline" (double-quotes are not paired in the same printed line)

    Workaround for completely double-quoted texts (inspired by Windows batch: echo without new line):

    set BEGIN_QUOTE=echo ^| set /p !="""
    ...
    %BEGIN_QUOTE%
    echo %\n%...after newline. Before newline...%\n%...after newline"
    

It works with completely single-quoted texts like:

echo '%\n%...after newline. Before newline...%\n%...after newline'
Added value: Escape Character
Note
There's a character after the '=' but you don't see it here but in edit mode. C&P works here.
:: Escape character - useful for color codes when 'echo'ing
:: See https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/console-virtual-terminal-sequences#text-formatting
set ESC=

For the colors see also https://imgur.com/a/EuNXEar and https://gist.github.com/gerib/f2562474e7ca0d3cda600366ee4b8a45.

2nd added value: Getting Unicode characters easily

A great page for getting 87,461 Unicode characters (AToW) by keyword(s): https://www.amp-what.com/.

The Reasons

  • The version in Ken's answer works apparently (I didn't try it), but is somehow...well...you see:

    set NLM=^
    
    
    set NL=^^^%NLM%%NLM%^%NLM%%NLM%
    
  • The version derived from user2605194's and user287293's answer (without anything between '=' and '^'):

    set nl=^&echo:
    set \n=^&echo:
    

    works partly but fails with the variable at the beginning of the line to be echoed:

    > echo %\n%Hello%\n%World!
    echo   & echo:Hello & echo:World!
    echo is ON.
    Hello
    World
    

    due to the blank argument to the first echo.

  • All others are more or less invoking three echos explicitely.

  • I like short one-liners.

The Story Behind

To prevent set \n=^&echo: suggested in answers herein echoing blank (and such printing its status) I first remembered the Alt+255 user from the times when Novell was a widely used network and code pages like 437 and 850 were used. But 0d255/0xFF is ›Ÿ‹ (Latin Small Letter Y with diaeresis) in Unicode nowadays.

Then I remembered that there are more spaces in Unicode than the ordinary 0d32/0x20 but all of them are considered whitespaces and lead to the same behaviour as ›␣‹.

But there are even more: the zero width spaces and joiners which are not considered as whitespaces. The problem with them is, that you cannot C&P them since with their zero width there's nothing to select. So, I copied one that is close to one of them, the hair space (U+200A) which is right before the zero width space (U+200B) into Notepad++, opened its Hex-Editor plugin, found its bit representation E2 80 8A and changed it to E2 80 8B. Success! I had a non-whitespace character that's not visible in my \n environment variable.

Solution 15 - Windows

To start a new line in batch, all you have to do is add "echo[", like so:

echo Hi!
echo[
echo Hello!

Solution 16 - Windows

why not use substring/replace space to echo;?

set "_line=hello world"
echo\%_line: =&echo;%
  • Results:
hello
world
  • Or, replace \n to echo;
set "_line=hello\nworld"
echo\%_line:\n=&echo;%

Solution 17 - Windows

For windows 10 with virtual terminal sequences there exists the means control the cursor position to a high degree.

To define the escape sequence 0x1b, the following can be used:

@Echo off
 For /f %%a in ('echo prompt $E^| cmd')Do set \E=%%a

To output a single newline Between Strings:

<nul set /p "=Hello%\E%[EWorld"

To output n newlines where n is replaced with an integer:

<nul set /p "=%\E%[nE"

Many

Solution 18 - Windows

Please note that all solutions that use cursor positioning according to Console Virtual Terminal Sequences, Cursor Positioning with:

Sequence Code Description Behaviour
ESC [ <n> E CNL Cursor Next Line Cursor down <n> lines from current position

only work as long as the bottom of the console window is not reached.

At the bottom there is no space left to move the cursor down so it just moves left (with the CR of CRLF) and the line printed before is overwritten from its beginning.

Solution 19 - Windows

This worked for me, no delayed expansion necessary:

@echo off
(
echo ^<html^> 
echo ^<body^>
echo Hello
echo ^</body^>
echo ^</html^>
)
pause

It writes output like this:

<html>
<body>
Hello
</body>
</html>
Press any key to continue . . .

Solution 20 - Windows

You can use @echo ( @echo + [space] + [insecable space] )

Note: The insecable space can be obtained with Alt+0160

Hope it helps :)

[edit] Hmm you're right, I needed it in a Makefile, it works perfectly in there. I guess my answer is not adapted for batch files... My bad.

Solution 21 - Windows

simple

set nl=.
echo hello
echo%nl%
REM without space ^^^
echo World

Result:

hello
world

Solution 22 - Windows

Be aware, this won't work in console because it'll simulate an escape key and clear the line.

Using this code, replace <ESC> with the 0x1b escape character or use this Pastebin link:

:: Replace <ESC> with the 0x1b escape character or copy from this Pastebin:
:: https://pastebin.com/xLWKTQZQ

echo Hello<ESC>[Eworld!

:: OR

set "\n=<ESC>[E"
echo Hello%\n%world!

Solution 23 - Windows

Adding a variant to Ken's answer, that shows setting values for environment variables with new lines in them.

We use this method to append error conditions to a string in a VAR, then at the end of all the error checking output to a file as a summary of all the errors.

This is not complete code, just an example.

@echo off
SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION
:: the two blank lines are required!
set NLM=^


set NL=^^^%NLM%%NLM%^%NLM%%NLM%
:: Example Usage:

Set ErrMsg=Start Reporting:
:: some logic here finds an error condition and appends the error report
set ErrMsg=!ErrMsg!!NL!Error Title1!NL!Description!NL!Summary!NL!

:: some logic here finds another error condition and appends the error report
set ErrMsg=!ErrMsg!!NL!Error Title2!NL!Description!NL!Summary!NL!

:: some logic here finds another error condition and appends the error report
set ErrMsg=!ErrMsg!!NL!Error Title3!NL!Description!NL!Summary!NL!

echo %ErrMsg%
pause
echo %ErrMsg% > MyLogFile.log

Log and Screen output look like this...

Log output of the script

Screen output of the script

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionBrian R. BondyView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - WindowsMatt LaceyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - WindowsGrimtronView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - WindowsKenView Answer on Stackoverflow
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