You can, but with some drawbacks:
You can prevent having this black window on start up if you compile for subsystem Windows.
But then you have to attach the process to the calling console (cmd.exe) manually via AttachConsole(-1)
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms681952%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
This alone does not do the job. You also have to redirect the three std streams to the console via these calls:
// redirect unbuffered STDOUT to the console
lStdHandle = (long)GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE);
hConHandle = _open_osfhandle(lStdHandle, _O_TEXT);
fp = _fdopen( hConHandle, "w" );
*stdout = *fp;
setvbuf( stdout, NULL, _IONBF, 0 );
fp = _fdopen( hConHandle, "r" );
*stdin = *fp;
setvbuf( stdin, NULL, _IONBF, 0 );
// redirect unbuffered STDERR to the console
lStdHandle = (long)GetStdHandle(STD_ERROR_HANDLE);
hConHandle = _open_osfhandle(lStdHandle, _O_TEXT);
fp = _fdopen( hConHandle, "w" );
*stderr = *fp;
setvbuf( stderr, NULL, _IONBF, 0 );
// make cout, wcout, cin, wcin, wcerr, cerr, wclog and clog
// point to console as well
ios::sync_with_stdio();
Sample from: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2004-05/msg00215.html
The problem with your WinMain call is that windows already has forked out your process so the calling cmd.exe console will have returned from your .exe already and proceed with the next command.
To prevent that you can call your exe with start /wait myexe.exe
This way you also get the return value of your app and you can check it with %errorlevel% as usual.
If there is a way to prevent that process forking with subsystem windows please let me know.
Hope this helps.