In Bash, # is used to comment the following. How do I make a comment on the Windows command line?
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1Possible duplicate of [Which comment style should I use in batch files?](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12407800/which-comment-style-should-i-use-in-batch-files) – Michael Freidgeim Jan 27 '16 at 01:30
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For block comments see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8526946/commenting-multiple-lines-in-dos-batch-file – AjV Jsy Apr 01 '16 at 08:49
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Possible duplicate of [How to "comment-out" (add comment) in a batch/cmd?](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11269338/how-to-comment-out-add-comment-in-a-batch-cmd) – jonrsharpe Jan 14 '19 at 20:04
8 Answers
The command you're looking for is rem, short for "remark".
There is also a shorthand version :: that some people use, and this sort of looks like # if you squint a bit and look at it sideways. I originally preferred that variant since I'm a bash-aholic and I'm still trying to forget the painful days of BASIC :-)
Unfortunately, there are situations where :: stuffs up the command line processor (such as within complex if or for statements) so I generally use rem nowadays. In any case, it's a hack, suborning the label infrastructure to make it look like a comment when it really isn't. For example, try replacing rem with :: in the following example and see how it works out:
if 1==1 (
rem comment line 1
echo 1 equals 1
rem comment line 2
)
You should also keep in mind that rem is a command, so you can't just bang it at the end of a line like the # in bash. It has to go where a command would go. For example, only the second of these two will echo the single word hello:
echo hello rem a comment.
echo hello & rem a comment.
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5I knew of REM but was not aware of the `::` syntax. Is it not widely known? – JAB Jun 08 '10 at 15:35
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7Well, I know there's one person that knew of it. And now there's two :-) Maybe I can claim that I doubled the amount of knowledge in the world. FWIW, Rob van der Woude's site is a truly excellent one for batch file (and other) chicanery: http://www.robvanderwoude.com/batchfiles.php – paxdiablo Jun 08 '10 at 23:55
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1[Which comment style should I use in batch files?](http://stackoverflow.com/q/12407800/395857) gives more details about `::`. – Franck Dernoncourt Feb 23 '16 at 01:50
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1To avoid the comment from appearing in the output you can prefix `REM` with an `@`: `@REM Some comment` – Marcono1234 Jul 06 '21 at 15:20
A comment is produced using the REM command which is short for "Remark".
REM Comment here...
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Sometimes, it is convenient to add a comment to a command line. For that, you can use "&REM misc comment text" or, now that I know about it, "&:: misc comment text". For example:
REM SET Token="4C6F72656D20697073756D20646F6C6F" &REM This token is for localhost
SET Token="722073697420616D65742C20636F6E73" &REM This token is for production
This makes it easy to keep track of multiple sets of values when doing exploration, tests of concept, etc. This approach works because '&' introduces a new command on the same line.
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It's "REM".
Example:
REM This is a comment
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: this is one way to comment
As a result:
:: this will also work
:; so will this
:! and this
: ***** and so on ***** :
: // even this \\ :
Above styles work outside codeblocks, otherwise:
REM is another way to comment.
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Lines starting with "rem" (from the word remarks) are comments:
rem comment here
echo "hello"
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Powershell
For powershell, use #:
PS C:\> echo foo # This is a comment
foo
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A single colon without a space after it is enough
Just don't leave comments at the last line in block
Finally, this works:
if 1==1 (
:comment line 1
echo 1 equals 1
)
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