Introduction
How a command line is interpreted
Batch reloading
Environment variables
Switches
Error level
String processing
Command-line arguments
Wildcards
User input
%~ (percent tilde)
Functions
Calculation
Finding files
Keyboard shortcuts
Paths
Arrays
Perl one-liners
Limitations
Built-in commands
ASSOC
BREAK
CALL
CD, CHDIR
CLS
COLOR
COPY
DEL, ERASE
DIR
DATE
ECHO
ELSE
ENDLOCAL
EXIT
FOR
FTYPE
GOTO
IF
MD, MKDIR
MKLINK
MOVE
PATH
PAUSE
POPD
PROMPT
PUSHD
RD, RMDIR
REN, RENAME
REM
SET
SETLOCAL
SHIFT
START
TIME
TITLE
TYPE
VER
VERIFY
VOL
External commands
Legal & credits

DEL, ERASE

suggest change

DEL and ERASE are the same commands.

Deletes files. Use with caution, especially in combination with wildcards. Only deletes files To delete use RD.

Examples:

Links:

$ del /?
Deletes one or more files.

DEL [/P] [/F] [/S] [/Q] [/A[[:]attributes]] names
ERASE [/P] [/F] [/S] [/Q] [/A[[:]attributes]] names

  names         Specifies a list of one or more files or directories.
                Wildcards may be used to delete multiple files. If a
                directory is specified, all files within the directory
                will be deleted.

  /P            Prompts for confirmation before deleting each file.
  /F            Force deleting of read-only files.
  /S            Delete specified files from all subdirectories.
  /Q            Quiet mode, do not ask if ok to delete on global wildcard
  /A            Selects files to delete based on attributes
  attributes    R  Read-only files            S  System files
                H  Hidden files               A  Files ready for archiving
                I  Not content indexed Files  L  Reparse Points
                O  Offline files              -  Prefix meaning not

If Command Extensions are enabled DEL and ERASE change as follows:

The display semantics of the /S switch are reversed in that it shows
you only the files that are deleted, not the ones it could not find.

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