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Lists scheduled commands or schedules commands and programs to run on a computer at a specified time and date. The Schedule service must be running to use the at command. at [\\computername] [[id] [/delete] | /delete [/yes]] at [\\computername] time [/interactive] [/every:date[,...] | /next:date[,...]] command Parameters none Used without parameters, at lists scheduled commands. \\computername Specifies a remote computer. If this parameter is omitted, the commands are scheduled on the local computer. id Specifie the identification number assigned to a scheduled command. /delete Cancels a scheduled command. If id is omitted, all the scheduled commands on the computer are canceled. /yes Forces a yes answer to all queries from the system when deleting scheduled events. time Specifies the time when the command is to run. Time is expressed as hours:minutes in 24-hour notation (00:00 [midnight] through 23:59). /interactive Allows the job to interact with the desktop of the user who is logged on at the time the job runs. /every:date[,...] Runs the command on every specified day or days of the week or month (for example, every Thursday, or the third day of every month). Specify date as one or more days of the week (M,T,W,Th,F,S,Su) or one or more days of the month (using numbers 1 through 31). Separate multiple date entries with commas. If date is omitted, the current day of the month is assumed. /next:date[,...] Runs the specified command on the next occurrence of the day (for example, next Thursday). Specify date as one or more days of the week (M,T,W,Th,F,S,Su) or one or more days of the month (using numbers 1 through 31). Separate multiple date entries with commas. If date is omitted, the current day of the month is assumed. command Specifies the Windows 2000 command, program (.exe or .com file), or batch program (.bat or .cmd file) to be run. When the command requires a path as an argument, use the absolute path, that is, the entire path beginning with the drive letter. If the command is on a remote computer, specify UNC notation for the server and share name, rather than a remote drive letter. If the command is not an executable (.exe) file, you must precede the command with cmd /c; for example:
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