Current date in the file name

Solution 1:

In the command prompt and batch files, you can use %date% and %time% to return the date and time respectively. Date works fine, but the time value returned contains colons, which are illegal for use in filenames, but there is a way to remove those.

Use something like:

COPY file.txt file_%time:~0,2%%time:~3,2%%time:~6,2%_%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2%%date:~-4,4%.txt

This will produce a filename such as file_172215_01062009.txt

Update: The comments below have interesting twists on this command as well as some potential problems you can avoid.

Solution 2:

Use the %DATE% and/or %TIME environment variables, optionally substituting the characters that are not allowed in filenames, using %name:from=to% (%TIME::=% would remove all colons).

theory » echo %date%
2009-06-01

theory » echo %time%
16:30:41,46

theory » echo %time::=%
163052,17

theory » echo %time::=,%
16,30,58,68

theory » echo backup-%date%-%time::=-%.zip
backup-2009-06-01-16-31-18,82.zip

Solution 3:

The only reliable way to get appropriate date whatever regional setting are, is the solution from foxidrive @ https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11037831/filename-timestamp-in-windows-cmd-batch-script

@echo off
for /f "tokens=2 delims==" %%a in ('wmic OS Get localdatetime /value') do set "dt=%%a"
set "YY=%dt:~2,2%" & set "YYYY=%dt:~0,4%" & set "MM=%dt:~4,2%" & set "DD=%dt:~6,2%"
set "HH=%dt:~8,2%" & set "Min=%dt:~10,2%" & set "Sec=%dt:~12,2%"

set "datestamp=%YYYY%%MM%%DD%" & set "timestamp=%HH%%Min%%Sec%"
set "fullstamp=%YYYY%-%MM%-%DD%_%HH%-%Min%-%Sec%"
echo datestamp: "%datestamp%"
echo timestamp: "%timestamp%"
echo fullstamp: "%fullstamp%"
pause