<
programming> A system that takes a set (a "
batch") of
commands or jobs, executes them and returns the results, all
without human intervention. This contrasts with an
interactive system where the user's commands and the
computer's responses are interleaved during a single run.
A
batch system typically takes its commands from a disk
file
(or a set of
punched cards or
magnetic tape in the old
days) and returns the results to a
file (or prints them).
Often there is a queue of jobs which the system processes as
resources become available.
Since the advent of the
personal computer, the term "
batch"
has come to mean automating frequently performed tasks that
would otherwise be done interactively by storing those
commands in a "
batch file" or "
script". Usually this
file
is read by some kind of
command interpreter but
batch
processing is sometimes used with GUI-based applications that
define script equivalents for menu selections and other mouse
actions. Such a recorded sequence of GUI actions is sometimes
called a "
macro". This may only exist in memory and may not
be saved to disk whereas a
batch normally implies something
stored on disk.
(1998-06-26)