On 30/11/11 18:31, David H. Lipman wrote: > If the command is NOT in the PATH then you have to be in the directory where > the command > exists and when you run the command it will drop the downloaded files there. > When the > command and dependencies are in the PATH then all I have to do is open a > Command Prompt, > type "Y:" and run a FQ WGET command and the file(s) ovtained will be in the > "Y:" drive. I > dion't think the behaviour is any different for Win64 vs. Win32. Not really required, you can also call the program with the full path. It's just "standard" command line behavior. In Windows, you can run a program: By providing the full path: C:\Myprograms\wget.exe http://example.org
By being in that program folder: cd C:\Myprograms wget http://example.org By having the program folder in the PATH (it's not really needed to change this each time, the default can be set in "My Computer" properties) set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Myprograms wget http://example.org Less known, by calling another drive current folder: cd C:\Myprograms D: C:wget.exe http://example.org On all these cases, the files would be downloaded to the current folder (which will be listed in the prompt by default) Note that in windows you can skip the .exe extension of the program you run.