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| Thread ID: 134590 | 2013-07-17 01:32:00 | Utility sought | DeSade (984) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1349115 | 2013-07-17 01:32:00 | I need a utility that will take the folder (or file) names from a directory and output a txt file. Don't want to mess around with a dos prompt to do it. Any suggestions? |
DeSade (984) | ||
| 1349116 | 2013-07-17 02:05:00 | This? There's a free and Pro version (www.infonautics.ch) | Speedy Gonzales (78) | ||
| 1349117 | 2013-07-17 02:08:00 | That looks like it will do the job. Cheers |
DeSade (984) | ||
| 1349118 | 2013-07-17 02:09:00 | No probs | Speedy Gonzales (78) | ||
| 1349119 | 2013-07-17 02:10:00 | Powershell: get-childitem <starting directory> -recurse | select-object FullName | out-file <output file> e.g.: get-childitem c:\ -recurse | select-object FullName | out-file c:\fileout.txt will give you a recursive list of everything on c:\ (well, everything the user you're logged in as has permission to see) and output it to c:\fileout.txt |
inphinity (7274) | ||
| 1349120 | 2013-07-17 03:37:00 | I know you said no DOS but... The dos command is Dir >list.txt If you create a text document called list.bat in notepad and put that line in, copy to the directory, and double click it you'll get your file. You can use any of the DOS switches as well Dir /D >list.txt works quite well for example. If you put " >filename.txt" on the end of most dos commands that generate text it'll output to a file instead of the screen |
dugimodo (138) | ||
| 1349121 | 2013-07-17 03:43:00 | Likewise, dir /b /d /s will give you a recursive list of all files & subfolders within the current folder, the same as my powershell suggestion above ;) | inphinity (7274) | ||
| 1349122 | 2013-07-17 04:14:00 | Yeah /b is probably what you're after, means "bare list", so you don't get filesizes etc... Best part is this is already on *every* system! dir /b > file.txt Easy :D |
Chilling_Silence (9) | ||
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