Displays the name of or changes the current directory. If used with only a drive letter (for example, cd C:), cd displays the names of the current directory in the specified drive. If used without parameters, cd displays the current drive and directory.
Note |
|
This command is the same as the chdir command. |
For examples of how to use this command, see Examples.
cd [/d] [<Drive>:][<Path>]
cd [..]
chdir [/d] [<Drive>:][<Path>]
chdir [..]
|
Parameter
|
Description
|
|
/d
|
Changes the current drive as well as the current directory for a drive.
|
|
<Drive>:
|
Specifies the drive to display or change (if different from the current drive).
|
|
<Path>
|
Specifies the path to the directory that you want to display or change.
|
|
[..]
|
Specifies that you want to change to the parent folder.
|
|
/?
|
Displays help at the command prompt.
|
If command extensions are enabled, the following conditions apply to the cd command:
-
The current directory string is converted to use the same case as the names on the disk. For example,
cd C:\TEMP would set the current directory to C:\Temp if that is the case on the disk.
-
Spaces are not treated as delimiters, so Path can contain spaces without enclosing quotation marks. For example:
cd username\programs\start menu
is the same as:
cd "username\programs\start menu"
The quotation marks are required, however, if extensions are disabled.
To disable command extensions, type:
The root directory is the top of the directory hierarchy for a drive. To return to the root directory, type:
To change the default directory on a drive that is different from the one you are on, type:
cd [<Drive>:\[<Directory>]]
To verify the change to the directory, type: