Compares files, displaying the differences in their content.
Examples:
fc File1.txt File2.txt >NUL && Echo Same || echo Different or error
- Detects difference using the error level of fc. The error level of zero means the files are the same; non-zero can mean the files differ but also that one of the files does not exist.
$ fc t.cpp t.cpp
Comparing files t.cpp and T.CPP
FC: no differences encountered
$ echo %ERRORLEVEL%
0
$ fc t.cpp t.go
Comparing files t.cpp and T.GO
***** t.cpp
#include <stdio.h>
... more output
$ echo %ERRORLEVEL%
1
Links:
$ fc /?
Compares two files or sets of files and displays the differences between
them
FC [/A] [/C] [/L] [/LBn] [/N] [/OFF[LINE]] [/T] [/U] [/W] [/nnnn]
[drive1:][path1]filename1 [drive2:][path2]filename2
FC /B [drive1:][path1]filename1 [drive2:][path2]filename2
/A Displays only first and last lines for each set of differences.
/B Performs a binary comparison.
/C Disregards the case of letters.
/L Compares files as ASCII text.
/LBn Sets the maximum consecutive mismatches to the specified
number of lines.
/N Displays the line numbers on an ASCII comparison.
/OFF[LINE] Do not skip files with offline attribute set.
/T Does not expand tabs to spaces.
/U Compare files as UNICODE text files.
/W Compresses white space (tabs and spaces) for comparison.
/nnnn Specifies the number of consecutive lines that must match
after a mismatch.
[drive1:][path1]filename1
Specifies the first file or set of files to compare.
[drive2:][path2]filename2
Specifies the second file or set of files to compare.
Found a mistake? Have a question or improvement idea?
Let me know.
Table Of Contents