In Windows, commands are usually entered via a command-line interpreter, like Command Prompt or Recovery Console. Commands must always be entered into a command line interpreter exactly. Entering a command incorrectly (wrong syntax, misspelling, etc.) could cause the command to fail or worse, could execute the wrong command or the right command in the wrong way, creating serious problems. There are many kinds of commands, and many phrases that use the word command that probably shouldn’t, because they’re not actually commands. It can be kind of confusing. Below are some popular kinds of commands you might encounter.

Command Prompt Commands

Command Prompt commands are true commands. True commands are programs that are intended to be run from a command-line interface (in this case the Windows Command Prompt) and whose action or result is also produced in the command line interface. One example is the chkdsk command, which can be used to fix hard drive errors. One commonly used and extremely useful command in Command Prompt is chdir (cd), used to change the working directory.

DOS Commands

DOS commands, more correctly called MS-DOS commands, might be considered the “purest” of the Microsoft based commands since MS-DOS has no graphical interface, so each command lives completely in the command line world. Don’t confuse DOS commands and Command Prompt commands. MS-DOS and the Command Prompt may appear similar, but MS-DOS is a true operating system while Command Prompt is a program that runs within the Windows operating system. Both share many commands, but they are certainly not the same.

Run Commands

A run command is simply the name given to an executable for a particular Windows-based program. It’s not a command in the strictest sense, but more like a shortcut. In fact, the shortcuts that live in your Start menu or on your Start Screen are usually nothing more than an icon representation of the executable for the program—basically a run command with a picture. For example, the run command for Paint, the painting and drawing program in Windows, is mspaint and can be run from the Run box or Search box, or even from the Command Prompt, but Paint is obviously not a command line program. Some other examples are a bit more confusing. The run command for Remote Desktop Connection, for example, is mstsc, but this run command does have some command line switches that make opening the program with specific parameters very easy. However, Remote Desktop Connection is not a program designed for the command-line, so it’s not really a command.

Control Panel Commands

Another command you’ll see referenced that isn’t really a command is the Control Panel applet command. This is really just the run command for the Control Panel, with a parameter instructing Windows to open a specific Control Panel applet. For example, executing this opens the Date and Time applet in Control Panel directly. You can execute this command from the Command Prompt, but the Control Panel is not a command line program.

Recovery Console Commands

Recovery Console commands are also true commands. They’re only available from within the Recovery Console, the command line interpreter available only for troubleshooting problems and only in Windows XP and Windows 2000.