You can clearly see the pictures are cropped using this algorithm in your command line:
Using a program of choice type in
echo Hello World
pause
save it as hello.cmd
If you are using "Notepad" as an editor, you should pay much attention to the saved name, as Notepad tends to add always a .txt extension to your files, which means that the actual name of your file might be hello.cmd.txt. To avoid this, in the save dialog box:
In the File name field enter the name in double quotes, e.g. "hello.cmd"
In the Save as type field select All Files, instead of the default Text Document option.
If the file has been saved properly, its icon should be similar to (Windows Vista):
cmd icon
You may also consider to disable the option "Hide extension for known file types" in File Explorer folder view options. In this case, file names are always displayed with their extensions.
To execute hello.cmd there are two possibilities. If you are using the Windows graphical shell, just double click on its icon.
If you want to use the Command Prompt itself, you must first identify the directory where you saved hello.cmd. In this regard, if you open File Explorer with +E. In the windows listing files, you normally read the name of the directory path containing them. You can therefore identify the directory of hello.cmd. Windows directory names tend to be quite long and typing them is error prone. It is better if you select and copy the directory path in the clipboard for later pasting.
Start the Command Prompt. You read a line similar to this.
Microsoft Windows [Version ...]
(c) ... Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
C:\Users\...>
The version/year of Windows of course depends on yours. In the the final line, before >, you read the path of the directory which is current. You should make current the directory where your script is. For this reason enter the change directory command cd, using a line similar to the following:
cd <dirpath>
Instead of <dirpath>, paste the name of the directory you previously copied.
To paste the directory path, in Windows 10, you just need to type Ctrl-C, as you would in an editor. For older systems you should be able to do this by right clicking in the cmd window.
After entering the command, note that current path, before >, changes accordingly.
You can now run your hello script by simply entering:
hello