I have a small utility script called clear.bat
that does some housekeeping work on my sources.
It is a .bat
file so that I could easily double-click it in Windows Explorer.
Sometimes, I find it more handy to execute it from my Git bash (msysgit, if this matters).
To do this, I type
cmd
clear.bat
exit
cmd
turns my Git bash into a normal cmd
window where I could easily execute my batch. When I type exit
, the cmd
environment is terminated and I'm back in my Git bash.
Could this be achieved in an easier way?
I tried cmd /C clean.bat
since the docs say
Syntax
CMD [charset] [options]
CMD [charset] [options] [/c Command]
CMD [charset] [options] [/k Command]
Options
/C Run Command and then terminate
/K Run Command and then return to the CMD prompt.
This is useful for testing, to examine variables
Edit:
Just noticed that the post is broken.
What I want is to execute clean.bat
from within the Git bash without having to type the three commands above (cmd
, clear.bat
, exit
). I just want to execute the .bat
file from within my Git bash. Obvious way would be to create a separate .sh
file that does the same work but this will lead to double code.
Edit 2:
When I execute cmd /C clean.bat
, the Git bash turns into a plain CMD environment and only displays the prompt. The file clean.bat
does not get executed. It's the same as if I just type cmd
.
Also, adding a /debug
switch does literally nothing. Seems like only cmd
gets evaluated and all further parameters are getting ignored.
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