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Home/ Questions/Q 1085399
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T22:41:03+00:00 2026-05-16T22:41:03+00:00

I never studied OSes, so forgive me if this sounds basic or silly, but

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I never studied OSes, so forgive me if this sounds basic or silly, but I’m curious about if one could replace the cmd prompt in Windows. I am NOT asking for programs that actually do this, as I’ve looked around and not really seen any.

What I’m asking is 1) if it’s actually possible to write an entirely new program that would behave like cmd and 2) if one could then replace cmd with it, assuming it could perform at least all the jobs that cmd does.

Because it seems like even programs that claim to be an upgrade to it (cygwin, powershell, etc) are actually running in that same little black window. Maybe I’m just not fully understanding how cmd fits into windows as a whole, or how something like bash actually connects into linux.

Anyone care to steer me in the right direction?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T22:41:04+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 10:41 pm

    “That same little black window” is a feature of Windows’s “console” subsystem. Console-mode apps get that window pretty much for free, and have it opened for them (either by Windows itself or by the runtime libs, i forget which) when they’re started from Windows rather than from the command line. (Console-mode programs run from an existing console tend to borrow the console of the parent process.)

    The fact that console apps look alike doesn’t necessarily mean they’re all run from cmd.exe (although there’s often a batch file that starts them, they can be started on their own), but that they all use the same subsystem and the same features.

    With all that said, it’s quite possible to write a replacement for cmd.exe. It’s just a console app. The catch is making it compatible enough to run batch files (lest existing apps break when they expect to use cmd.exe), and still having enough flexibility to add whatever you want to add to a shell.

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