No, you can not use a string as a delimiter in the delims=
clause. Of course you can include the string, but it will be handled as a set of separate characters that will be used as delimiters, not as a delimiter string.
If you really need to split on a string, the fastest approach could be to replace the delimiter string by a character not included in the data and use this character as delimiter
@echo off
setlocal enableextensions disabledelayedexpansion
for /f "delims=" %%a in ("this is a +test!! #+# of string #splitting#") do (
set "buffer=%%a"
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
(for /f "tokens=1,2 delims=?" %%b in ("!buffer:#+#=?!") do (
endlocal
echo full line : [%%a]
echo first token : [%%b]
echo second token : [%%c]
)) || if "!!"=="" endlocal
)
Note: The setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
is needed to be able to read the variable changed inside the for
loop retrieving the data (here simulated directly including a string). Then, inside the for
loop that tokenizes the readed line, delayed expansion is disabled to avoid problems with the !
characters (if delayed expansion is active, they will be consumed by the parser). This is the reason for the endlocal
inside the loop.
As we are doing a string replacement and it is possible to end with a string composed of only delimiters, it is possible that the do
clause of the inner for
will not be executed, so the final if
is included to ensure that the enabledelayedexpansion
is cancelled.
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