FINDSTR
(from Find Strings)
Searches for strings in files. This command is an extension of the FINDFIND command, except for the line counting feature.
FINDSTR [/B] [/E] [/L] [/R] [/S] [/I] [/X] [/V] [/N] [/M] [/O] [/P] [/F:file] [/C:"string"] [/G:file] [/D:dir list] [/A:attr_col] [/OFF[LINE]] "strings" [[drive:][path]filename [...]]
Where:
/B
- Searches for the element at the beginning of the line./E
- Searches for the element at the end of the line./L
- Uses search strings literally./R
- Uses search strings as regular expressions (see below)./S
- Searches files in the current directory and all subdirectories./I
- Specifies that the search should not be case-sensitive./X
- Prints the lines that match exactly./V
- Prints only lines that contain no matches./N
- Prints the corresponding line numbers./M
- Prints only the filename if it contains a match./O
- Prints the character offset before each match./P
- Ignores files with non-printable characters./OFF[LINE]
- Does not ignore files that have the offline attribute set./A:attr_col
- Specifies the color attribute with two hexadecimal digits (see COLORCOLOR)./F:file
- Reads the file list from the specified file./C:"string"
- Uses the specified string for a literal search./G:file
- Reads the search strings to use from the specified file./D:dir list
- Searches for a semicolon (;
)-delimited list of directories."strings"
- Specifies the words to search for.[drive:][path]filename
- Specifies the files to search for.
If spaces are used when specifying strings without /C:
in front, a search is made for each string, otherwise, if /C:
is used, a search is made for a single string of multiple words (see examples).
Regular expression reference:
.
- Shows all strings.*
- Repeats zero or more occurrences of the previous character or class.$
- Displays the last string.[class]
- Any character from the set (in square brackets[ ]
, each separated from another by a comma,
).[^class]
- Any character not in the set (without square brackets[ ]
, each separated by a comma,
).[x-y]
- Any character in the specified range.\x
- Literal use of thex
character (escaping).\<xyz
- Start of word.xyz\>
- End of word.
Examples:
1. Search for any string containing the words handsome coconut
(without being separated) in the file C:\Documents and Settings\salted capers.txt
ignoring uppercase and lowercase:
findstr /i /c:"handsome coconut" "C:\Documents and Settings\salted capers.txt"
2. Search for the words Damn
, the
and shovel
in the file C:\bucket.doc
with the colors white for the text and dark blue for the background:
findstr /a:1f "Damn the shovel" "C:\bucket.doc"
3. Search for any string not containing the characters c
, d
, t
, v
, and z
in the C:\Wow!!.pdf
file:
findstr /r ^c,d,t,v,z "C:\Wow!!.pdf"
Comments