I’m trying to remove an asterisk from an environmental variable string, but can’t seem to do it.
I’m creating an m3u file based around search strings, so for instance I if I want to make an m3u file containing every song with the word love in it, I would enter:
m3u *Love*
And m3u.bat would create the file:
xLovex.m3u
But the regular method of replacing characters does not work with an asterisk. (Though I don’t have that problem with the question mark.)
set nam=%nam:*=x%.m3u
Instead creates the filename
x.m3u
The easy answer is no.
The problem that you’re encountering stems from the fact that the asterisk * is a special character when used with the SET search and replace method. It matches multiple characters in a limited, but still useful, way. You can learn about that here.
The hard answer is Yes!
I will provide you with two solutions. One an incomplete solution but elegent,
the other complete and inelegent.
Both methods will search for * and replace it with an x.
Both methods will both search and modify the following string:
The first method that comes to mind is using a ‘FOR /L’ statement, and requires that you know how many characters long the environmental variable is.
Both versions require delayed environmental variable expansion, but for two different reasons. One because I’m operating inside a FOR statement. The other because you cannot put a % pair inside another % pair because the command processor matches the second % that it encounters to the first one it encounters, but we need to use a variable inside another variable expression. (You’ll see.)
This solution uses the strLen function (in line 3) from DosTips.com that can be found Here. Just slap it into a file called strLen.bat and be amazed at it’s speed!
Solution 1: (FOR /L Solution) :: Preferred Solution ::
I think this is a quick and elegant solution It could be sped up by adding the contents of strLen.bat to the routine, but I wanted no confusion as to the author.
If you, for some reason, do not wish to use strLen, then the next quickest method would probably use a GOTO loop.
Solution 2: (Goto Solution)
Special thanks to dbenham for pointing out the strLen function. It works faster than any batch based function has a right to!