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You can use wt.exe
to open a new instance of Windows Terminal from the command line. You can also use the execution alias wt
instead.
Note
If you built Windows Terminal from the source code on GitHub, you can open that build using wtd.exe
or wtd
.
Command line syntax
The wt
command line accepts two types of values: options and commands. Options are a list of flags and other parameters that can control the behavior of the wt
command line as a whole. Commands provide the action, or list of actions separated by semicolons, that should be implemented. If no command is specified, then the command is assumed to be new-window
by default.
wt [options] [command ; ]
Note
The behavior of the wt.exe
command may be affected by the windowingBehavior property. This setting can be adjusted to default between opening a new window or opening a new tab.
To display a help message listing the available command line arguments, enter: wt -h
, wt --help
, wt -?
, or wt /?
.
Options and commands
Below is the full list of supported commands and options for the wt
command line.
Option | Description |
---|---|
--help , -h , -? , /? | Displays the help message. |
--maximized , -M | Launches the terminal maximized. |
--fullscreen , -F | Launches the terminal as full screen. |
--focus , -f | Launches the terminal in the focus mode. Can be combined with maximized . |
--window , -w <window-id> | Launches the terminal in a specific window. |
New-tab
command
Command | Parameter | Description | Values |
---|---|---|---|
new-tab , nt | --profile, -p profile-name | Creates a new tab based on the profile name assigned. | Profile name |
new-tab , nt | --startingDirectory, -d starting-directory | Creates a new tab based on the starting directory path assigned. | Directory path |
new-tab , nt | commandline | Creates a new tab based on the command line assigned. | Executable with optional commands |
new-tab , nt | --title | Creates a new tab with the title assigned. | Text to use as the tab title |
new-tab , nt | --tabColor | Creates a new tab with the tab color assigned. | Hex color as #RGB or #RRGGBB |
Tip
If you change the title of a tab in Windows Terminal and want that title to persist, you must enable the suppressApplicationTitle option by setting it to true
.
Split-pane
command
Command | Parameter | Description | Values |
---|---|---|---|
split-pane , sp | -H, --horizontal , -V, --vertical | Creates a new split window pane either horizontally or vertically. | N/A. No additional values to assign. |
split-pane , sp | --profile, -p profile-name | Creates a new split window pane based on the assigned command line profile. If this parameter is not assigned, the default profile will be used. | Profile name |
split-pane , sp | --startingDirectory, -d starting-directory | Creates a new split window pane based on the assigned starting directory path. If this parameter is not assigned, the default starting directory will be used. | Directory path |
split-pane , sp | --title | Creates a new split window pane with the assigned title. | Text to use as the tab title |
split-pane , sp | --tabColor | Creates a new split window pane with the assigned tab color. | Hex color as #RGB or #RRGGBB |
split-pane , sp | --size, -s size | Creates a new split window pane with the assigned size. | Float that specifies the portion of the parent pane to use represented by a decimal. For example, .4 to represent 40% of the parent pane. |
split-pane , sp | commandline | Creates a new split window pane based on the assigned command line. | Executable with optional commands |
split-pane , sp | --duplicate, -D | Creates a new split window pane that is a duplicate of the current pane. | N/A. No additional values to assign. |
Focus-tab
command
Command | Parameter | Description | Values |
---|---|---|---|
focus-tab , ft | --target, -t tab-index | Focuses on a specific tab according to it's tab index number. | Tab index as an integer |
Move-focus
command
Command | Parameter | Description | Values |
---|---|---|---|
move-focus , mf | direction | Move focus between panes in the given direction. | up , down , left , or right values accepted. |
Note
When opening Windows Terminal from cmd (Command Prompt), if you want to use your custom "cmd" profile settings, you will need to use the command wt -p cmd
. Otherwise, to run your default profile settings, just use wt cmd
.
Command line argument examples
Commands may vary slightly depending on which command line you're using.
Passing an argument to the default shell
To start an instance of Windows Terminal and have it execute a command, call wt.exe
followed by your command.
Here's an example of calling Windows Terminal to pass a ping command argument to echo an IP address:
wt ping learn.microsoft.com
Here's an example of calling Windows Terminal to open a new tab with a PowerShell command line, confirming to call the Start-Service command, and opening another new tab with Windows Command Prompt open to the /k
directory:
wt new-tab PowerShell -c Start-Service ; new-tab cmd /k dir
Target a specific window
Below are examples of how to target specific windows using the --window,-w
option.
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
// Open a new tab with the default profile in the current windowwt -w 0 nt// Open a new tab in a new window with the default profilewt -w -1 nt// Open a new tab in the first-created terminal window with the default profilewt -w 1 nt// Open a new tab in the terminal window named foo with the default profile. If foo does not exist, create a new window named foo.wt -w foo nt
Open a new profile instance
To open a new terminal instance, in this case the command will open the profile named "Ubuntu-18.04", enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt -p "Ubuntu-18.04"
The -p
flag is used to specify the Windows Terminal profile that should be opened. Substitute "Ubuntu-18.04" with the name of any terminal profile that you have installed. This will always open a new window. Windows Terminal is not yet capable of opening new tabs or panes in an existing instance.
Target a directory
To specify the folder that should be used as the starting directory for the console, in this case the d:\ directory, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt -d d:\
Multiple tabs
To open a new terminal instance with multiple tabs, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt ; ;
To open a new terminal instance with multiple tabs, in this case a Command Prompt profile and a PowerShell profile, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt -p "Command Prompt" ; new-tab -p "Windows PowerShell"
Multiple panes
To open a new terminal instance with one tab containing three panes running a Command Prompt profile, a PowerShell profile, and your default profile running a WSL command line, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt -p "Command Prompt" ; split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" ; split-pane -H wsl.exe
The -H
flag (or --horizontal
) indicates that you would like the panes to be split horizontally. The -V
flag (or --vertical
) indicates that you would like the panes split vertically.
Multiple tabs and panes
The new-tab
and split-pane
commands can be sequenced to get multiple tabs, each with split panes. To open a new terminal instance with two tabs, each with two panes running a Command Prompt and a WSL command line, with each tab in a different directory, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt -p "Command Prompt" ; split-pane -V wsl.exe ; new-tab -d c:\ ; split-pane -H -d c:\ wsl.exe
Pane title
To open a new terminal instance with custom titles for each terminal pane, use the --title
argument. To set the title of each pane when opening multiple tabs, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt --title tabname1 ; new-tab -p "Ubuntu-18.04" --title tabname2
Panes in the same tab can have different titles, which will reflect on the tab title depending on which pane has focus. To name independent panes, you can set the title after splitting the panes by entering:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt --title pane1 ; split-pane -p "Command Prompt" --title pane2
Using application title
To open a new terminal instance allowing applications within it to set the tab title by sending title change messages, use the --useApplicationTitle
flag. To suppress these messages, use the --suppressApplicationTitle
flag. If none of these flags are provided, the behavior is inherited from the profile's settings. To open a tab with title tabname
that will not be overridden by the application, enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt --title tabname --suppressApplicationTitle
Tab color
To open a new terminal instance with custom tab colors, use the --tabColor
argument. This argument overrides the value defined in the profile, but can be overridden as well using the tab color picker. In the following example, a new terminal is created with two tabs of different colors:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt --tabColor #009999 ; new-tab --tabColor #f59218
When --tabColor
is set for a tab, it is associated with the first pane of this tab. Hence in a tab with multiple panes, the color will be applied only if the first pane is in focus. To set the tab color for additional panes, you will need to add the --tabColor
parameter to the split-pane
subcommand as well. In the example below, a tab with two panes is created with tab colors specified for each pane:
wt new-tab --tabColor '#009999' `; split-pane --tabColor '#f59218'
Color scheme
To open a new terminal instance with a specific color scheme (instead of the colorScheme
set in the profile), use the --colorScheme
argument. This argument overrides the value defined in the profile.
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt --colorScheme Vintage ; split-pane --colorScheme "Tango Light"
Tab focus
To open a new terminal instance with a specific tab in focus, use the -t
flag (or --target
), along with the tab-index number. To open your default profile in the first tab and the "Ubuntu-18.04" profile focused in the second tab (-t 1
), enter:
- Command Prompt
- PowerShell
- Linux
wt ; new-tab -p "Ubuntu-18.04" ; focus-tab -t 1
Examples of multiple commands from PowerShell
Windows Terminal uses the semicolon character ;
as a delimiter for separating commands in the wt
command line. Unfortunately, PowerShell also uses ;
as a command separator. To work around this, you can use the following tricks to run multiple wt
commands from PowerShell. In all the following examples, a new terminal window is created with three panes - one running Command Prompt, one with PowerShell, and the last one running WSL.
The following examples do not use start
to run the command line. Instead, there are two other methods of escaping the command line:
- Only escaping the semicolons so that
PowerShell
will ignore them and pass them straight towt
. - Using
--%
, so PowerShell will treat the rest of the command line as arguments to the application.
wt new-tab "cmd" `; split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" `; split-pane -H wsl.exe
wt --% new-tab cmd ; split-pane -p "Windows PowerShell" ; split-pane -H wsl.exe
In both of these examples, the newly created Windows Terminal window will create the window by correctly parsing all the provided command-line arguments.
However, these methods are not recommended currently, as PowerShell will wait for the newly-created terminal window to be closed before returning control to PowerShell. By default, PowerShell will always wait for Windows Store applications (like Windows Terminal) to close before returning to the prompt. Note that this is different than the behavior of Command Prompt, which will return to the prompt immediately.