I'm trying to search a string (entered by the user when prompted for a path) for a trailing quote and delete it if found.
The problem: I have a bat file that prompts the user to enter a filename and path (the first is typically done via drag/drop.) If the user enters a destination path enclosed in quotes because it contains spaces, my resulting command will look like this: compress.exe "c:\source path\"destination.zip"
That extra quote in the middle needs to go. I've found plenty of ways to search a file for a string, and I found this post here on StackOverflow that seems to apply, but doesn't seem to work in my situation.
I tried the command at the above linked path, telling it to search for \" instead of bcd, but the code expects the string it's searching to have been passed to it (as a switch) upon execution, and when I try to modify the command to search srcpath instead, the bat fails. I also tried this:
if "!srcpath:~-1"=="\"" set srcpath=!srcpath:~0,-1!
This results in: "The syntax of the command is incorrect."
How can I search a string for a trailing quote and trim it? Every method I can find doesn't seem to work when the character being searched for is the quote (slash quote: \").