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Take Command (command line interpreter)

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Developer(s)
  
JP Software

Operating system
  
Microsoft Windows

Available in
  
English

Development status
  
Active

Platform
  
x86

Take Command (command line interpreter) wwwfullprogramlarindircomwpcontentuploads201

Stable release
  
20.0 / August 13, 2016 (2016-08-13)

Take Command was the name that JP Software used for their GUI command-line interpreters for Windows 3.1 (TC16), Windows 32-bit (TC32) and later OS/2 Presentation Manager (TCOS2). These were released concurrently with version 4DOS 5.5, 4NT 2.5 and 4OS2 2.52. The OS/2 and Windows 16-bit survived until version 2.02, they are still available for download from the FTP site on JP Software.

Beginning with version 9, the name Take Command was applied to an entirely different assembly of products: TCI (Tabbed Command Interface) and 4NT. The original Take Command is no longer being developed. TCI was expanded to include a file manager and various other windows, while 4NT was renamed TCC, and issued in "light" form.

Take Command is a command-line interpreter for the Microsoft Windows line of operating systems. Its advantages over the regular command shell are analogous to those of 4DOS over the COMMAND.COM supplied with MS-DOS.

Beginning with version 9, Tabbed Console Interface and 4NT have been merged into the Take Command product line. 4NT was renamed to Take Command Console, with a Lite Edition (TCC/LE) released as freeware. Take Command includes a tabbed interface, configurable toolbars, and an integrated graphical file explorer. Take Command adds a built-in batch file editor and debugger, FTP and HTTP file access in commands, network file system access, Active Scripting integration, system monitoring commands, and Windows service controls.

Features

Features of note include:

  • Command aliases
  • Command-line completion
  • Command history
  • File globbing / Wildcards
  • Redirection and piping
  • Direct access to FTP, TFTP and HTTP
  • Context-specific online help
  • Colored directory listings
  • Variable functions
  • Fully customizable
  • References

    Take Command (command line interpreter) Wikipedia