I have an application which start in 0x0 position of my desktop. I want to open it in center of my desktop. I do not want to open it and use a move command to move it into c
I just found this question while on a quest to do the same thing.
After some experimenting I came across an answer that works the way the OQ would want and is simple as heck, but not very general purpose.
Create a shortcut on your desktop or elsewhere (you can use the create-shortcut helper from the right-click menu), set it to run the program "cmd.exe" and run it. When the window opens, position it where you want your window to be. To save that position, bring up the properties menu and hit "Save".
Now if you want you can also set other properties like colors and I highly recommend changing the buffer to be a width of 120-240 and the height to 9999 and enable quick edit mode (why aren't these the defaults!?!)
Now you have a shortcut that will work. Make one of these for each CMD window you want opened at a different location.
Now for the trick, the windows CMD START command can run shortcuts. You can't programmatically reposition the windows before launch, but at least it comes up where you want and you can launch it (and others) from a batch file or another program.
Using a shortcut with cmd /c you can create one shortcut that can launch ALL your links at once by using a command that looks like this:
cmd /c "start cmd_link1 && start cmd_link2 && start cmd_link3"
This will open up all your command windows to your favorite positions and individually set properties like foreground color, background color, font, administrator mode, quick-edit mode, etc... with a single click. Now move that one "link" into your startup folder and you've got an auto-state restore with no external programs at all.
This is a pretty straight-forward solution. It's not general purpose, but I believe it will solve the problem that most people reading this question are trying to solve.
I did this recently so I'll post my cmd file here:
cd /d C:\shortucts
for %%f in (*.lnk *.rdp *.url) do start %%f
exit
Late EDIT: I didn't mention that if the original cmd /c command is run elevated then every one of your windows can (if elevation was selected) start elevated without individually re-prompting you. This has been really handy as I start 3 cmd windows and 3 other apps all elevated every time I start my computer.
You'll need an additional utility such as cmdow.exe to accomplish this. Look specifically at the /mov
switch. You can either launch your program from cmdow
or run it separately and then invoke cmdow
to move/resize it as desired.
Bill K.'s answer was the most elegant if you just want to start a window at startup or start from a shortcut on the desktop.
Just open the window where you want it, right click and choose properties. select Layout uncheck "let system position window" and click OK.
Window will now open just where you want it. You can set font and window colors at the same time on other tabs. sweet.
Thanks To FuzzyWuzzy , set the following code ( Quick & Dirty Example for 1920x1080 screen resolution - without automatic width and height calculation or function use etc ) in AutoHotKey to achive the following :
v_cmd = c:\temp\1st_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
SetTitleMatchMode 2
SetTitleMatchMode Fast
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, 0, 0,1920,500
v_cmd = c:\temp\2nd_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, 0, 500,960,400
v_cmd = c:\temp\3rd_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, 960, 500,960,400
SMALL EDIT same code with Auto X / Y screen size calculation [ 4 monitors ], yet, can be used for 3 / 2 monitors as well.
Screen_X = %A_ScreenWidth%
Screen_Y = %A_ScreenHeight%
v_cmd = c:\temp\1st_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
SetTitleMatchMode 2
SetTitleMatchMode Fast
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, 0, 0,Screen_X/2,Screen_Y/2
v_cmd = c:\temp\2nd_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, Screen_X/2, 0,Screen_X/2,Screen_Y/2
v_cmd = c:\temp\3rd_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, 0, Screen_Y/2,Screen_X/2,Screen_Y/2
v_cmd = c:\temp\4th_Monitor.ps1
Run, Powershell.exe -executionpolicy remotesigned -File %v_cmd%
WinWait, PowerShell
Sleep, 1000
;A = Active window - [x,y,width,height]
WinMove A,, Screen_X/2, Screen_Y/2,Screen_X/2,Screen_Y/2
Have found that AutoHotKey is very good for window positioning tasks.
Here is an example script. Call it notepad.ahk and then run it from the command line or double click on it.
Run, notepad.exe
WinWait, ahk_class Notepad
WinActivate
WinMove A,, 10, 10, A_ScreenWidth-20, A_ScreenHeight-20
It will start an application (notepad) and then adjust the window size so that it is centered in the window with a 10 pixel border on all sides.
You can use nircmd
project here: http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/nircmd.html
Example code:
nircmd win move ititle "cmd.exe" 5 5 10 10
nircmd win setsize ititle "cmd.exe" 30 30 100 200
nircmd cmdwait 1000 win setsize ititle "cmd.exe" 30 30 1000 600