Add a MSCMD_ECHO_COMMAND_COMPAT define to be able to switch back to our
older but less broken behaviour at compile-time.
- Append a trailing space to commands when those have a parameter,
as well as after a command-block closing parenthesis.
- Space around redirection strings need to be switched around.
- Use ConOutPuts() instead of ConOutPrintf() for displaying strings that
are not printf formatted.
- When echo-ing/unparsing FOR command, any possible FOR variables
present in the FOR parenthesized list (before the "do" part) should be
substituted as well.
* Update German translations
* Update translation again
* More translations
* Some fixes in the german translation
* Some more fixes
* Little translation tweak
* Updates to 2nd review
* Little update
* Add back keyboard accel for IDS_OPENFILELOCATION.
Co-authored-by: Hermès BÉLUSCA - MAÏTO <hermes.belusca-maito@reactos.org>
pushd command of cmd.exe didn't treat the quoted parameter correctly.
- Call StripQuotes in SetRootPath function.
- Fix typo of FEATURE_DIRECTORY_STACK.
This PR will enable "Command Prompt" here. CORE-12150
Particular DIR commands like: "DIR .", "DIR .." now work as expected,
and we also correctly fix the behavior for files without extension,
that r38746 (2b06cfc0) originally tried to fix but broke the previous
examples.
Therefore "DIR *." and "DIR noextfile." work too.
Pathological cases like "DIR \...", "DIR \...\.", "DIR ..\...\.." and
the like (and with more than 3 dots) now work as expected.
Adapted from PR #592 by Katayama Hirofumi MZ, but with extended bugfixing.
CORE-13961
- Introduce two small helpers to change and restore the console title.
- Console title can change even when internal commands are executed.
- Note that when commands are run from within batch files, title is unchanged.
- When "cmd.exe /c command" is run, the console title is unchanged; however
when "cmd.exe /k command" is run, the console title changes.
This allows to break commands such as:
C:\ReactOS\system32> for %f in (*.*) do dir
as one would expect: stop the currently running 'dir' and the 'for'.
"bCtrlBreak" doesn't need to be volatile too.
Using CTRL-C to cancel command line input would leave the prompt in
a state where the next command would be ignored. For example:
dir<CTRL-C>
dir
would cause cmd.exe to ignore the second dir command.
CORE-11677
The standard Win32 Console Control Handler will give CTRL-C events to
processes spawned from cmd.exe. If cmd.exe calls GenerateConsolCtrlEvent()
then the child process will receive two CTRL-C events.