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Home/ Questions/Q 719609
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T05:39:45+00:00 2026-05-14T05:39:45+00:00

A windows batch file ( called.bat or called.cmd ) can be called from another

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A windows batch file (called.bat or called.cmd) can be called from another batch file (caller.bat or caller.cmd) or interactive cmd.exe prompt in several ways:

  1. direct call: called.bat
  2. using call command: call called.bat
  3. using cmd command: cmd /c called.bat
  4. using start command: start called.bat

I’m quite in trouble to differentiate their intended usage based on their help text: when to use which one? e.g. why I might use ‘call’ command instead of direct call. What’s different?

I’m interested on some summary report that analyze all 4 possibilities (and others if any missing) from various point of views: recommended use cases for which they are designed to fit, process spawning, execution context, environment, return code processing.

Note: I’m using Windows XP SP3.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T05:39:46+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 5:39 am
    1. The batch file will be executed by the current cmd.exe instance (or a new cmd.exe instance if, for instance, double-clicked in Explorer).

    2. Same as #1, only has an effect when used inside a batch/cmd file. In a batch file, without ‘call’, the parent batch file ends and control passes to the called batch file; with ‘call’ runs the child batch file, and the parent batch file continues with statements following call.

    3. Runs the batch file in a new cmd.exe instance.

    4. Start will run the batch file in a new cmd.exe instance in a new window, and the caller will not wait for completion.

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