Selecting a Font
Unlike most Windows-based applications, applications in a Command Prompt can display only one font at a time. Your choice is relatively limited, as you'll see if you click the Font tab in the Command Prompt window's properties dialog box.
The small window at the bottom of this dialog box shows an actual-size sample of the selected font; the window at the top shows the relative size and shape of the Command Prompt window if you use the selected font.
Make a selection in the Font list first because your choice here determines the contents of the Size list. If you select the Consolas or Lucida Console font, you'll find point sizes to choose from in the Size list. If you select Raster Fonts, you'll find character widths and height in pixels.
In this tutorial:
- Working with the Command Prompt
- Starting and Ending a Command Prompt Session
- Easy ways to invoke administrator Command Prompt sessions
- Starting Command Prompt at a Particular Folder
- Strings with Spaces Need Quotes
- Cmd.exe vs. Command.com
- Commands Are Not Case Sensitive
- Starting Command Prompt and Running a Command
- Cmd.exe and Other Command Prompts
- Using AutoRun to Execute Commands When Command Prompt Starts
- Using Cmds Command-Line Syntax
- Using Commands
- Type /? for help
- Starting Programs
- Open Windows Explorer at the current Command Prompt folder
- Using File-Name and Folder-Name Completion
- Use a different completion character
- Using Wildcards
- Editing the Command Line
- Using Command Symbols
- The Redirection Symbols
- The Pipe Symbol
- The Command Combination Symbols
- Pausing or Canceling Commands
- Simplifying Command Entry with Doskey Macros
- DOSKEY Saves Typing
- System Variables Identify the Environment
- Viewing Environment Variables
- Modifying Environment Variables
- Predefined Environment Variables
- Customizing Command Prompt Windows
- Setting the Window Size and Position
- Setting the Window Size and Position Visually
- Selecting a Font
- Setting Colors
- Setting Other Options
- Copy and paste in the command prompt window
- Navigating from the command prompt
- Printing a list of filenames
- Commands Use Paths
- Identifying Executables
- Modifying the Path to Executables
- Modifying the Path with the GUI
- Changing the Current Path with CD
- Changing the Current Path with Windows Explorer
- Capturing the Output
- A Sampling of Commands
- Dir
- Copy
- XCopy
- SET
- NET USE
- SystemInfo
- DriverQuery
- Echo
- Advanced Shell Commands
- Creating a Batch File
- Scheduling a Batch File
- Creating Scheduled Tasks with a Script
- Using Windows PowerShell and the PowerShell ISE
- Windows PowerShell ISE
- PowerShell Commands
- Verbs and Nouns
- Sending Output to a Text File
- PowerShell Syntax
- Variables Created with a $ Symbol
- Comparison Operators
- Parentheses, Brackets, and Braces
- Running PowerShell Scripts
- PowerShell Execution Policy
- Changing the Execution Policy
- Looping
- Collections
- Creating a PowerShell Script
- Documenting Scripts
- Using PowerShell Commands
- Getting Help on PowerShell
- Using WMI_Cmdlets
- Getting Details on an Object
- Querying Information on Specific Objects
- Terminate Applications with Win32_process
- Formatting Output with the -f Format Operator
- Filtering the Output with the Where-Object Command
- Using the IF statement
- Using the Switch Statement
- Script Reusability