cmd is somehow writing Chinese text as output

Solution 1:

The reason is that WMIC outputs to UNICODE. While the batch commands outputs to ANSI by default. Since the ANSI codepage is smaller than UNICODE and mapped differently, converting between them becomes a problem. There are several ways to solve this problem.

A. Start the command shell with the /U switch or if already in a command prompt, just type cmd /U.

Help from the "Help cmd" command: /U Causes the output of internal commands to a pipe or file to be Unicode

Thus, you will end up with a UNICODE text file and your original code needs no modification. However, you will need to remember to always use the /U switch. Also the correct way to do it is :

    wmic /OUTPUT:output.txt logicaldisk get name, freespace
    echo %date% >> output.txt

B. Convert the WMIC output to ANSI (Recommended. However depends on what you need. Just makes life easier when you decide to add to the text file. However, you will have to use 2 output files.).

   wmic /OUTPUT:output.tmp logicaldisk get name, freespace
   TYPE output.tmp > output.txt
   echo %date% >> output.txt

Hope this will help someone.

Solution 2:

WMIC has some weird output. I've seen a discussion where it was said WMIC uses unicode, but I think the situation is more complicated than that. If I capture WMIC output to a file and use a hex editor, I see an extra carriage return at the end of each line. I am completely at a loss as to how the date content is converted into gibberish when the output.txt is typed. (codepage issue? but how?) On my machine I get question marks where the date should be.

I was able to fix the problem by using

wmic logicaldisk get name, freespace | more >>output.txt
echo %date%>>output.txt 

Solution 3:

I found that a batch script used to create a txt output file using stdout ">>" to create the txt file is compatible with powershell's output format ascii, utf8 and utf7, all other output formats result in extra spaces seen in the file.

If the output file is created with powershells stdout ">>" then any stdout additions to the file from a batch script will appear as Chinese characters.

The workaround in my case was to re-create the output file with the batch script and it will be in the correct format and subsequent powershell additions must use "| out-file -encoding ascii/utf8/utf7"