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What's the relative order with which Windows search for executable files in PATH?

If I have a.com, a.cmd, a.bat, and a.exe files %PATH%, which one would Windows pick if I invoke just the command "a"? Is this officially spec-ed somewhere by M$?

I just wanted to wrap my gvim.exe executable with -n, but my gvim.bat doesn't appear to get run neither from the command lin开发者_如何学JAVAe, nor from the Run dialog.


See the command search sequence on Microsoft Docs

The PATH and PATHEXT environmental variables each provide an element of the search sequence: PATH is the ordered list of directories "where" to look, and PATHEXT is the ordered list of file extensions ("what") to look for (in case the extension isn't explicitly provided on the command line). Prior to using the PATH however, the current directory is searched.

The PATHEXT variable defaults to ".COM;.EXE;.BAT;.CMD"


Summarized from the Microsoft Technet link provided by mjv:

Windows will step through the directories in PATH from left to right (normal list order). In each of these, it attempts to locate a file with each PATHEXT also left to right, before continuing to the next PATH entry. The first file it finds wins.

So, in your case, you need to change PATHEXT so that .BAT comes before .EXE (or it will always find .exe first and not the .bat you most likely want to override it, if in the same directory) and also put the path of your 'override' gvim.bat earlier (earliest?) in the PATH listing than anywhere it could find gvim.* (because it tries every PATHEXT in each before going on down PATH)


I believe it walks through %PATHEXT% and tries each of those

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