In computing, time and date are commands in DOS, OS/2 and Windows that are used to display and set the current system time and date of the operating system. Both commands are available in command line interpreters (shells) such as COMMAND.COM, cmd.exe, 4DOS and 4NT.
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| - In computing, time and date are commands in DOS, OS/2 and Windows that are used to display and set the current system time and date of the operating system. Both commands are available in command line interpreters (shells) such as <a href="/mediawiki/COMMAND.COM" title="COMMAND.COM">COMMAND.COM</a>, <a href="/mediawiki/Cmd.exe" title="Cmd.exe">cmd.exe</a>, 4DOS and 4NT.
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| - This article is no longer needed. The information contained within has been moved to the separate articles date (command) and time (command) and articles which linked here have been updated to link to them instead
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abstract
| - In computing, time and date are commands in DOS, OS/2 and Windows that are used to display and set the current system time and date of the operating system. Both commands are available in command line interpreters (shells) such as <a href="/mediawiki/COMMAND.COM" title="COMMAND.COM">COMMAND.COM</a>, <a href="/mediawiki/Cmd.exe" title="Cmd.exe">cmd.exe</a>, 4DOS and 4NT. In Unix, the <a href="/mediawiki/Date_(Unix)" title="Date (Unix)">date</a> command displays and sets both the time and date, in a similar manner. Unix also has an unrelated <a href="/mediawiki/Time_(Unix)" title="Time (Unix)">time</a> command, used to measure the time spent by other commands. In Windows PowerShell, date is a short form for the Get-Date Cmdlet which returns the current system time object. The Set verb of the Cmdlet is used to set both date and time.
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