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I try to understand the difference between these two process creation flags. The Process Creation Flags documentation is not clear about the distinction.

  • Does CREATE_NO_WINDOW cause the process to have a console (standard input/output streams initialized) without displaying a window while DETACH_PROCESS has no console at all?
  • What are the implications for a child-of-a-child process?
  • What would be the behavior matrix that describes what happens at each combination of (parent has console, parent doesn't have console) X (child executable requires console (main), child executable does not require console (WinMain))?
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  • What do you mean by "each combination"? MSDN clearly states: "This flag is ignored if the application is not a console application, or if it is used with either CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE or DETACHED_PROCESS." for CREATE_NO_WINDOW. So in a sense they are mutually exclusive. Jun 16, 2011 at 17:13
  • I meant combinations for child and parent being console or non-console executables. If the parent is a non-console application and I launch a console application from it with DETACH_PROCESS flag, would the child error out if it needs the console.
    – Manny
    Jun 17, 2011 at 13:11
  • that depends entirely on the implementation of the C runtime. If I remember correctly, the MSVCRT would not cause problems in such a case. Other runtimes might. Jun 17, 2011 at 20:59
  • I found that github.com/rprichard/win32-console-docs is a great resource for win console info. Nov 25, 2021 at 13:44

2 Answers 2

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The difference is in what the started process can do. In both cases it won't have a console. But with the CREATE_NO_WINDOW option it can call AttachConsole(ATTACH_PARENT_PROCESS) and get access to the parent's console window (if available). That explicitly will not work when you specify DETACH_PROCESS. The only option then is for the started process to use AllocConsole() to create its own console.

Or in other words, you can be sure that the started process will never be able to chatter into your own console by using DETACH_PROCESS.

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  • 2
    Random note: powershell does not like DETACH_PROCESS. Nov 29, 2016 at 4:31
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    To provide further info, CREATE_NO_WINDOW still inits a separate conhost.exe instance (just hidden) to parent the launched process and to marshall the process' input/output while DETACHED_PROCESS creates no 'conhost.exe' instance at all. Nov 18, 2021 at 0:37
  • This answer seems to be incorrect. gist.github.com/josephcsible/f4dc0ca94adb41de1df358ed150d0c9b can write to its parent's console whether you start it with CREATE_NO_WINDOW or DETACH_PROCESS. Jun 3, 2022 at 17:49
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I have not tested what Hans Passant said about AttachConsole(ATTACH_PARENT_PROCESS). However, I have found another difference based on testing.

Let's define a process tree to better explain what I mean:

A
|
+-- B
    |
    +-- C

With DETACH_PROCESS, only the started process (B) has no console — by default. If the started process starts console child processes (C), then each of those child process will be started in a new console. Furthermore, the started process B (or its children C) can still create a console by calling AllocConsole.

CREATE_NO_WINDOW is a "nuclear option" that's stronger than DETACH_PROCESS. Even the started process' children (C) don't get a console, not even if they call AllocConsole. Furthermore, Ctrl-C'ing the topmost process (A) won't terminate B and C, so it seems that CREATE_NO_WINDOW also includes an effect similar to starting a new process group.

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