Question

How can I open a cmd window in a specific location without having to navigate all the way to the directory I want?

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Solution

You may want to look at this "PowerToy" from Microsoft:

Open Command Window Here

This PowerToy adds an "Open Command Window Here" context menu option on file system folders, giving you a quick way to open a command window (cmd.exe) pointing at the selected folder.

EDIT : This software will not function on a version of Windows earlier or later than Windows XP.

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OTHER TIPS

This might be what you want:

cmd /K "cd C:\Windows\"

Note that in order to change drive letters, you need to use cd /d. For example:

C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe /K "cd /d H:\Python\"

(documentation)

If you have Windows Vista or later, right-click on the folder icon in Explorer while holding the Shift key, and then click on the "Open command window here" or "Open PowerShell window here" context menu option.

If you're already in the folder you want, you can do one of the following:

  • [only Win8+] Click the Explorer Ribbon's File button, then click on "Open command window here" or "Open PowerShell window here".
  • Shift-right-click on the background of the Explorer window, then click on "Open command window here" or "Open PowerShell window here". (recommended by Kate in the comments)
  • [only Vista or Win7] Hold down Shift when opening the Explorer File menu, then click on "Open command window here". If you can't see the menu bar, open the File menu by pressing Alt-Shift-F - Alt-F to open the File menu, plus Shift.

For Windows XP, use the PowerToy mentioned by dF to get the same function.

Assuming that in File Explorer you have opened the target directory/folder, do this:

  1. Click on address bar, alternatively press Alt+D

  2. Now when address bar is highlighted, type cmd in the bar.

  3. Press Enter key

You will notice that command prompt from that folder

From Windows 7 up to some versions of Windows 10, it is very simple to open a command prompt anywhere you wish, without navigation using command "cd". Try the following one. Click the mouse's right button by holding Shift key .

Sample

It will produce an option like this. Then simply select the "Open command window here " option. The latest versions of Windows 10 have replaced this feature with "Open Powershell here".

On Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 10 simply hold down the Shift key and right-click on a folder.

The context menu will contain an entry titled: "Open command window here"

Update: Type "cmd" in the address bar of Explorer and press enter

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Update 2: In windows 10, go to file menu and select "Open Windows PowerShell". There is an option for running as administrator.

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Use the /K switch. For example

cmd /K "cd /d c:\WINDOWS\"

Will create a cmd window at the C:\Windows directory

Just write cmd in the address bar, it will open in the current folder.

Create a shortcut and edit the "Start In" property of the shortcut to the directory you want the cmd.exe to start in.

In Windows 8, you can click the address bar and type "cmd" (without quotes) and hit enter. This will open the cmd window in the current path.

Also, here is a shortcut to open a console in any windows folder:

  • Open any folder on windows explorer.
  • Press Alt + D to focus the adress bar
  • type cmd and press enter

Very practical shortcut.

I just saw this question and cannot help to post my AutoHotkey script for cmd on Windows XP. You can spot the hot keys in the script. The nice thing is when your current windows is Explorer, the cmd will open in the path showing in the address bar.

I keep this script in a folder where I store all green tools (including AutoHotkey). For a new machine, I just copy the folder, double click the script to associate .ahk with AutoHotkey and create a shortcut in my startup folder. It is faster than installing PowerToys.

; Get working folder
GetWorkingFolder() {
    if WinActive("ahk_class ExploreWClass") or WinActive("ahk_class CabinetWClass") {
        ControlGetText, path, Edit1
        return %path%
    } else if WinActive("FreeCommander") {
        Send, {CTRLDOWN}{ALTDOWN}{INS}{ALTUP}{CTRLUP}
        Sleep, 100
        return clipboard
    } else {
        return "C:\"
    }
}

#IfWinActive,

#c::
    path := GetWorkingFolder()
    Run, %ComSpec%, %path%
    return

; PowerShell
#+C::
    path := GetWorkingFolder()
    Run, %SystemRoot%\system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe, %path%
    return

#^c::
    Run, %ComSpec%, %temp%
    return

#!c::
    path := GetWorkingFolder()
    Run, %comspec% /k "%VS90COMNTOOLS%vsvars32.bat", %path%
    return

; irb
#!b::
    path := GetWorkingFolder()
    Run, c:\cygwin\bin\ruby /usr/bin/irb, %path%
    return

; Bash
#b::
    path := GetWorkingFolder()
    Run, bash --login, %path%
    return

; Paste in console
+INS::
    if WinActive("ahk_class ConsoleWindowClass") {
        WinGetPos, x, y, w, h, A
        MouseGetPos, mx, my
        ;MsgBox x=%x% y=%y% w=%w% h=%h% mx=%mx% my=%my%
        if (mx < 10)
            mx = 10
        else if (mx > w - 30)
            mx := w - 30

        if (my < 40)
            my = 40
        else if (my > h)
            my := h - 10

        MouseClick, right, mx, my
    }
    return

For anyone who is interested, you can find this script at rwin on github

In windows go to folder location in file explorer remove path and type cmd and press enter. and path will open in cmd.

Update: This is built into Windows now. See this answer.

The XP powertoy is a good option, but I thought I'd post another, in case you'd like to "roll your own". Create a text file, name it anything.reg, paste in the code below, save it, then double-click on it to add it to the registry (or just add the info to the registry manually if you understand what's going on in this .reg file).

Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Folder\shell\Command_Prompt_Here...]
@="Command Prompt Here..."

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Folder\shell\Command_Prompt_Here...\command]
@="cmd.exe \"%1\""

Update: After an Windows-update, Win10 removed the cmd-here feature. To reactivate it you've to use:

Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\cmd]
@="@shell32.dll,-8506"
"Extended"=""
"NoWorkingDirectory"=""
"ShowBasedOnVelocityId"=dword:00639bc8

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\cmd\command]
@="cmd.exe /s /k pushd \"%V\""

The entry ShowBasedOnVelocityId is mandatory

For windows 7 or later, inside the target folder address bar just type cmd. That is it. It will open up command prompt with path set to your present directory.

Easiest way is to goto the address bar of the Windows Explorer and type cmd there. It will automatically open the command prompt window for you.

command 'pushd' will set currect folder so:

cmd /k "pushd D:\Music"

In File Explorer, press and hold the Shift key, then right click or press and hold on a folder or drive that you want to open the command prompt at that location for, and click/tap on Open Command Prompt Here option.

For windows : Select the folder which you want to open in command prompt - After selection, Keeping the 'Shift key' pressed. Right click there and choose option "open command window here"

In Windows Explorer - shift + right mouse click above folder "Open command window here" option show up in the menu. Or in language of your Windows version.

I see that there are multiple answers, some are quite complex :) , strange to see them. You just have to open any windows folder window, navigate to your desired folder and focus on address bar and enter "cmd" and press enter, you would be presented with new command prompt window directly with the folder path or location that we already navigated in windows folder window. In case you want to see these steps with clear images you can check out

how to open command prompt in a specific folder directly

If you are starting cmd from taskbar, this is what you need to do:

right click --> rightclick on Command Prompt --> Properties

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Then in the properties window change the value of Start in:

enter image description here

This solution doesn't work for opening command prompt as administrator

Make the shortcut to cmd.exe with params /S /K pushd "C:\YOUR FOLDER\"

There is a simplier way I know. Find cmd.exe in start menu and send it to Desktop as shortcut. Then right-click it and choose properties. You will see "Start in" box under the "Target". Change that directory as whatever you'd like to set. Click OK and start cmd.exe which is in your Desktop. In my opinion, it's a very easy and certain solution :)

This program always opens cmd.exe in the current path of your Explorer: https://github.com/jhasse/smart_cmd

You can also pin it to your taskbar and then use WindowsKey+[1-0] as a keyboard shortcut.

I noticed that the Shift + Right click super-long context menu with the "Open command window here" option does not always display for whatever reason (I'm using Windows 10) so here's a method that will always work:

  1. Hit Start, type "cmd", Right-click "Command Prompt" > Click "Open File Location".

  2. Copy the "Command Prompt" shortcut to the directory where you wish you could just open cmd at directly.

  3. Right click your new shortcut and click "Properties".

  4. Edit the "Start in:" field to be either blank or %CD% and then click "OK".

Now when you click this shortcut it will open the command prompt pointing at the current directory that the shortcut is currently in, e.g. copy this shortcut to the desktop and run it to open cmd to the desktop directory.

With a Just-one-line file in batch:

START "Desire_Path" // Without quotes puth the location that you want to start in with cmd

Example (Open a text editor, place the code in there and save the file with a .bat extension):

START cd C:\Users

Then just double click on it

****Note: if you want the explorer to complete the task don´t put the CD command.

*To do the opossite:

In order for you to open a particular directory with the explorer.exe aplication while using cmd you can use the command START and the absolute route of the folder that you want to display.

This method is using cmd.exe and Send to shortcut so cmd.exe can open directory directly. This alternative method is in case of not having Open command window here in right click menu.

  1. Open 'File Explorer' and enter shell:sendto in location bar to navigate to Send to folder.
  2. Copy a Command Prompt shortcut or create a new shortcut .lnk file.
  3. Edit the properties of the shortcut and edit the target to %windir%\system32\cmd.exe /k cd /d and press 'OK' to save the change.
  4. Right click on a folder and expand Send to menu to use the cmd shortcut.

This shortcut should open a cmd window with directory selected by the right click.

This method should work under Window 7 and 10 at least. Name the shortcut as Command Prompt (cd) to specify the task of the shortcut.

Possible error messages:

  • Show 'The directory name is invalid.' if other than folder is selected.
  • Show 'The system cannot find the drive specified.' if the folder is not existed.
  • Show 'The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.' if multiple files are selected.

Little about shortcut: The directory would be automatically added to the end of the shortcut as a parameter when using under Send to, so the shortcut does not need to type in the directory.

Right click the desktop and navigate to new and then from the sub-menu select "shortcut" → Browse to the Windows directory (or folder) and then to the system32 directory and click OK.

Add a \ and "cmd.exe" (without the quotes) to the command string. It should look like this:

C:\WINDOWS\System32\cmd.exe.

Click Next and Finish. Right click the new CMD icon on your desktop and select properties, and Next to the Start. In options, delete the line and add the path to wherever the directory is that you want it to start in... For example, C:\temp\mp3 and click OK.

Rather than saving it as a shortcut, this is how I do it and I find it very useful. There are already answers to show as a shortcut, but I just wanted to share this, especially I find it very useful for angular projects.

  • Create a new txt file and write the following code into it.
    @ECHO OFF cd C:\YourProjectPath\FolderPath\
  • save as .bat file with a convenient name. (I usually save it as "goto-myProjectName.bat"

  • Then copy that bat file into your default path (when you run the cmd, whatever is your default path, it starts with that. For instance, on my machine it is windows/system32)

  • Then type your bat file's name without its extension.
  • For instance:goto-myProjectName

Then it should take you to there.

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