It is "Start". If you prefix the statements with start, it will initate all the statements. Therefore, the script does not have to wait for statement one to finish to begin statement #2.
The goal as stated is to "run all the statements at once" where command 2 does not have to wait for command 1 to start. I was hopeing it was obvious from my initial post.
I am not looking for a delayed variable expansion. Not looking for anything "delayed". In fact, not sure what a delayed variable expansion is.
Let me try to explain the benefit of "running all commands at once". Assume for a second that you drive a car, and you want the ability to play the radio and open the window at the same time. That is what I am looking for In a typical batch file situation, I would have to wait until I was done listening to the radio and then I could open the radio. OK this last paragraph may have confused things. I guess to me the benefit seems obvious. Assume you wanted to copy a large log file and at the same time run a sql statement and run a "windows command". In a typical batch mode, you would have to wait for the copy to finish and then start the sql statement and when that was done - start the windows command.
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