CMD: How many left
-
18-09-2019 - |
Question
I just want to figure out,
How can a batch file (CMD) tell me how many days I'm left from any date...???
Such as:
set setdate=24/07/2009
echo The date is now: %date%
echo Your set date is: %setdate%
echo You're %days% days left from %setdate%
Thanks!
Solution
Here's a simple solution in VBScript:
Dim dt: dt = DateValue(WScript.Arguments.Unnamed(0))
Dim dtNow: dtNow = Now
Dim diff: diff = DateDiff("d", dtNow, dt)
WScript.Echo "The date is now: " & FormatDateTime(dtNow, vbShortDate)
WScript.Echo "Your set date is: " & FormatDateTime(dt, vbShortDate)
WScript.Echo "You're " & diff & " days left from " & FormatDateTime(dt, vbShortDate)
You can call this script from your batch file and specify the target date like this:
cscript filename.vbs 12/25/2009 //nologo
OTHER TIPS
...okay, since the asker wants me to do all the work for him, here's the script:
@echo off & setlocal
set now=%date%
set then=2010-08-01
:: split into year, month, day
set nY=%now:~0,4%&set nM=%now:~5,2%&set nD=%now:~8,2%
set tY=%then:~0,4%&set tM=%then:~5,2%&set tD=%then:~8,2%
:: remove leading zero
if "%nM:~,1%"=="0" set nM=%nM:~1%
if "%tM:~,1%"=="0" set tM=%tM:~1%
if "%nD:~,1%"=="0" set nD=%nD:~1%
if "%tD:~,1%"=="0" set tD=%tD:~1%
set mdays=31 28 31 30 31 30 31 31 30 31 30 31
set n=0
set t=0
call :days n %nM% %mdays%
call :days t %tM% %mdays%
set /a d=(t+tD)-(n+nD) + ((tY-nY) * 365)
goto :skip
:days
set var=%1
set M=%2
set i=0
shift & shift
:days_loop
set /a i=i+1
if %i% geq %M% goto :EOF
set /a %var%=%var%+%1
shift & goto :days_loop
:skip
echo The difference between %now% and %then% is %d% days.
For comparison, the same thing in Python:
import datetime
now = datetime.datetime.now()
then = datetime.datetime(
# Do NOT use leading zeros here.
year = 2010,
month = 8,
day = 1,
)
diff = then - now
It might be possible to achieve that with the simple math functionality in cmd.exe
, but it would depend on the regional settings of the machine (if you use a date format of DD/MM/YYYY, it will break on my YYYY-MM-DD), and it would take a lot of code.
It probably would be much easier to just use a scripting language such as Perl, PHP or Python for that.