formatierte Ausgabe mit echo nach Rechnen mit set
Hallo!
Folgende Batch Datei:
gibt folgendes aus:
Size von ... : -1671295726
Wie kann ich die Dateigröße so formatieren, dass ich was damit anfangen kann?
Zum Beispiel in MB oder KB?
Hoffe es kann mir jemand helfen.
Gruß
edit:
Wahrscheinlich sind es zu viele Dateien und die Dateigröße zu groß.
Welche Grenze gibt es denn da?
Folgende Batch Datei:
@echo off
set /a size=0
for /R "%USERPROFILE%\Eigene Dateien\" %%i in (*.*) do (
set /a fsize=%%~zi
set /a size=size+fsize
)
echo Size von %USERPROFILE% : %size% >> Daten.txt
gibt folgendes aus:
Size von ... : -1671295726
Wie kann ich die Dateigröße so formatieren, dass ich was damit anfangen kann?
Zum Beispiel in MB oder KB?
Hoffe es kann mir jemand helfen.
Gruß
edit:
Wahrscheinlich sind es zu viele Dateien und die Dateigröße zu groß.
Welche Grenze gibt es denn da?
Please also mark the comments that contributed to the solution of the article
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Printed on: April 24, 2024 at 07:04 o'clock
2 Comments
Latest comment
Hallo.
Ich würde es mir nicht so schwer machen. Vielleicht ist DIRUSE (ein Windows Support Tool) genau das richtige für Dich:
DIRUSE displays a list of disk usage for a directory tree(s). Version 1.20
DIRUSE [/S | /V] [/M | /K | /B] [/C] [/,] [/Q:# [/L] [/A] [/D] [/O]] [/*] DIRS
/S Specifies whether subdirectories are included in the output.
/V Output progress reports while scanning subdirectories. Ignored if /S is
specified.
/M Displays disk usage in megabytes.
/K Displays disk usage in kilobytes.
/B Displays disk usage in bytes (default).
/C Use Compressed size instead of apparent size.
/, Use thousand separator when displaying sizes.
/L Output overflows to logfile .\DIRUSE.LOG.
/* Uses the top-level directories residing in the specified DIRS
/Q:# Mark directories that exceed the specified size (#) with a "!".
(If /M or /K is not specified, then bytes is assumed.)
/A Specifies that an alert is generated if specified sizes are exceeded.
(The Alerter service must be running.)
/D Displays only directories that exceed specified sizes.
/O Specifies that subdirectories are not checked for specified size
overflow.
DIRS Specifies a list of the paths to check.
Note: Parameters can be typed in any order. And the '-' symbol can be
used in place of the '/' symbol.
Also, if /Q is specified, then return code is ONE if any directories are
found that
exceed the specified sizes. Otherwise the return code is ZERO.
Example: diruse /s /m /q:1.5 /l /* c:\users
Ich würde es mir nicht so schwer machen. Vielleicht ist DIRUSE (ein Windows Support Tool) genau das richtige für Dich:
DIRUSE displays a list of disk usage for a directory tree(s). Version 1.20
DIRUSE [/S | /V] [/M | /K | /B] [/C] [/,] [/Q:# [/L] [/A] [/D] [/O]] [/*] DIRS
/S Specifies whether subdirectories are included in the output.
/V Output progress reports while scanning subdirectories. Ignored if /S is
specified.
/M Displays disk usage in megabytes.
/K Displays disk usage in kilobytes.
/B Displays disk usage in bytes (default).
/C Use Compressed size instead of apparent size.
/, Use thousand separator when displaying sizes.
/L Output overflows to logfile .\DIRUSE.LOG.
/* Uses the top-level directories residing in the specified DIRS
/Q:# Mark directories that exceed the specified size (#) with a "!".
(If /M or /K is not specified, then bytes is assumed.)
/A Specifies that an alert is generated if specified sizes are exceeded.
(The Alerter service must be running.)
/D Displays only directories that exceed specified sizes.
/O Specifies that subdirectories are not checked for specified size
overflow.
DIRS Specifies a list of the paths to check.
Note: Parameters can be typed in any order. And the '-' symbol can be
used in place of the '/' symbol.
Also, if /Q is specified, then return code is ONE if any directories are
found that
exceed the specified sizes. Otherwise the return code is ZERO.
Example: diruse /s /m /q:1.5 /l /* c:\users