14

I have a program that is using findstr, and when the string is found the errorlevel returns 0 and when the string is not found the errorlevel returns 1. Alright, that's fine I can deal with that.

Where the issue lies is I cannot find any official documentation on what each errorlevel means for findstr. I need to know if anything else for findstr could ever return an errorlevel of 1, or if it only returns 1 when the string is not found.

Links to 'official' documentation are preferred, if there are any, but any input would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance!

Saltz3
  • 324
  • 1
  • 4
  • 15

2 Answers2

20

http://ss64.com/nt/findstr.html says:

FINDSTR will set %ERRORLEVEL% as follows:

0 (False) a match is found in at least one line of at least one file.
1 (True) if a match is not found in any line of any file, (or if the file is not found at all).
2 Wrong syntax 
An invalid switch will only print an error message in error stream.
Stephan
  • 53,940
  • 10
  • 58
  • 91
1

It is documented in the Dos 6.22 Help for FIND command.

│FIND exit codes
│
│The following list shows each exit code and a brief description of its
│meaning:
│
│0
│    The search was completed successfully and at least one match was found.
│
│1
│    The search was completed successfully, but no matches were found.
│
│2
│    The search was not completed successfully. In this case, an error
│    occurred during the search, and FIND cannot report whether any matches
│    were found.
│
│You can use the ERRORLEVEL parameter on the <If> command line in a batch
│program to process exit codes returned by FIND.
bill
  • 215
  • 1
  • 3