For exe files, I suppose the differences are nearly unimportant.
But to start an exe you don't even need CALL
.
When starting another batch it's a big difference,
as CALL
will start it in the same window and the called batch has access to the same variable context.
So it can also change variables which affects the caller.
START
will create a new cmd.exe for the called batch and without /b it will open a new window.
As it's a new context, variables can't be shared.
Differences
Using start /wait <prog>
- Changes of environment variables are lost when the <prog>
ends
- The caller waits until the <prog>
is finished
Using call <prog>
- For exe it can be ommited, because it's equal to just starting <prog>
- For an exe-prog the caller batch waits or starts the exe asynchronous, but the behaviour depends on the exe itself.
- For batch files, the caller batch continues, when the called <batch-file>
finishes, WITHOUT call the control will not return to the caller batch
Addendum:
Using CALL
can change the parameters (for batch and exe files), but only when they contain carets or percent signs.
call myProg param1 param^^2 "param^3" %%path%%
Will be expanded to (from within an batch file)
myProg param1 param2 param^^3 <content of path>
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