How do I increment a DOS variable in a FOR /F loop?

ArraysDos

Arrays Problem Overview


I'm trying to read text lines from a file, and increment a counter so I can eventually simulate an array in DOS.

I'd like to be able to store the lines of text in a DOS array for further processing.

My current attempt is:

set TEXT_T="myfile.txt"

set /a c=1

FOR /F "tokens=1 usebackq" %%i in (%TEXT_T%) do (
set /a c=c+1
echo %%i,  %c%
)

But the variable c is not incrementing; it stays at 1.

Suggestions welcome.

Thanks, Mike

Arrays Solutions


Solution 1 - Arrays

The problem with your code snippet is the way variables are expanded. Variable expansion is usually done when a statement is first read. In your case the whole FOR loop and its block is read and all variables, except the loop variables are expanded to their current value.

This means %c% in your echo %%i, %c% expanded instantly and so is actually used as echo %%i, 1 in each loop iteration.

So what you need is the delayed variable expansion. Find some good explanation about it here.

Variables that should be delay expanded are referenced with !VARIABLE! instead of %VARIABLE%. But you need to activate this feature with setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION and reset it with a matching endlocal.

Your modified code would look something like that:

set TEXT_T="myfile.txt"

set /a c=1

setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION

FOR /F "tokens=1 usebackq" %%i in (%TEXT_T%) do (
  set /a c=c+1
  
  echo %%i, !c!
)

endlocal

Solution 2 - Arrays

I would like to add that in case in you create local variables within the loop, they need to be expanded using the bang(!) notation as well. Extending the example at https://stackoverflow.com/a/2919699 above, if we want to create counter-based output filenames

set TEXT_T="myfile.txt"

set /a c=1

setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION

FOR /F "tokens=1 usebackq" %%i in (%TEXT_T%) do (
    set /a c=c+1
    set OUTPUT_FILE_NAME=output_!c!.txt
    echo Output file is !OUTPUT_FILE_NAME!
    echo %%i, !c!
)

endlocal

Solution 3 - Arrays

Or you can do this without using Delay.

set /a "counter=0"

-> your for loop here

do (
   statement1
   statement2
   call :increaseby1
 )

:increaseby1
set /a "counter+=1"

Solution 4 - Arrays

set TEXT_T="myfile.txt"
set /a c=1

FOR /F "tokens=1 usebackq" %%i in (%TEXT_T%) do (
    set /a c+=1
    set OUTPUT_FILE_NAME=output_%c%.txt
    echo Output file is %OUTPUT_FILE_NAME%
    echo %%i, %c%
)

Solution 5 - Arrays

What about this simple code, works for me and on Windows 7

set cntr=1
:begin
echo %cntr%
set /a cntr=%cntr%+1
if %cntr% EQU 1000 goto end
goto begin

:end

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMikeView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - ArraysFrank BollackView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - ArrayscurryageView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - ArraysCarlo PonsonesView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - ArraysShikhar BhargavaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - ArraysZonnevuurView Answer on Stackoverflow