The ECHO
built-in command,
how much simpler could it get?
It takes whatever you put on the command line and prints it.
And yet it’s not that simple.
For example, the ECHO
must be careful not to compress
whitespace, because people will write
ECHO Some text ECHO Indented text ECHO ---- underlined
and when you execute this, the result had better be
Some text Indented text ---- underlined
and not
Some text Indented text ---- underlined
But what if you want to echo a blank line or the word “ON” or “OFF” or a slash and a question mark?
C:\> ECHO ON C:\> ECHO ECHO is on. C:\> ECHO /? Displays messages, or turns command-echoing on or off. ...
To force the ECHO
command not to interpret its
arguments, put a dot immediately after the word “echo”:
C:\> ECHO. ON ON C:\> ECHO. C:\> ECHO./? /?
This is what happens when a language develops not by design but by evolution. It becomes filled with all sorts of strange quirks in order to accommodate new behavior while remaining compatible with old behavior. Nobody actually likes the batch language; they just are used to it.
0 comments