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[bpt/emacs.git] / man / cmdargs.texi
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1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2@c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
4@node Command Arguments, Antinews, Service, Top
5@appendix Command Line Arguments
6@cindex command line arguments
7@cindex arguments (command line)
8@cindex options (command line)
9@cindex switches (command line)
10@cindex startup (command line arguments)
11
12 GNU Emacs supports command line arguments to request various actions
13when invoking Emacs. These are for compatibility with other editors and
14for sophisticated activities. We don't recommend using them for
15ordinary editing.
16
17 Arguments starting with @samp{-} are @dfn{options}. Other arguments
18specify files to visit. Emacs visits the specified files while it
19starts up. The last file name on your command line becomes the current
20buffer; the other files are also present in other buffers. As usual,
21the special argument @samp{--} says that all subsequent arguments
22are file names, not options, even if they start with @samp{-}.
23
24 Emacs command options can specify many things, such as the size and
25position of the X window Emacs uses, its colors, and so on. A few
26options support advanced usage, such as running Lisp functions on files
27in batch mode. The sections of this chapter describe the available
28options, arranged according to their purpose.
29
30 There are two ways of writing options: the short forms that start with
31a single @samp{-}, and the long forms that start with @samp{--}. For
32example, @samp{-d} is a short form and @samp{--display} is the
33corresponding long form.
34
35 The long forms with @samp{--} are easier to remember, but longer to
36type. However, you don't have to spell out the whole option name; any
37unambiguous abbreviation is enough. When a long option takes an
38argument, you can use either a space or an equal sign to separate the
39option name and the argument. Thus, you can write either
40@samp{--display sugar-bombs:0.0} or @samp{--display=sugar-bombs:0.0}.
41We recommend an equal sign because it makes the relationship clearer,
42and the tables below always show an equal sign.
43
44@cindex initial options (command line)
45@cindex action options (command line)
46 Most options specify how to initialize Emacs, or set parameters for
47the Emacs session. We call them @dfn{initial options}. A few options
48specify things to do: for example, load libraries, call functions, or
49exit Emacs. These are called @dfn{action options}. These and file
50names together are called @dfn{action arguments}. Emacs processes all
51the action arguments in the order they are written.
52
53@menu
54* Action Arguments:: Arguments to visit files, load libraries,
55 and call functions.
56* Initial Options:: Arguments that take effect while starting Emacs.
57* Command Example:: Examples of using command line arguments.
58* Resume Arguments:: Specifying arguments when you resume a running Emacs.
59* Environment:: Environment variables that Emacs uses.
60
61* Display X:: Changing the default display and using remote login.
62* Font X:: Choosing a font for text, under X.
63* Colors X:: Choosing colors, under X.
64* Window Size X:: Start-up window size, under X.
65* Borders X:: Internal and external borders, under X.
66* Title X:: Specifying the initial frame's title.
67* Icons X:: Choosing what sort of icon to use, under X.
68* Resources X:: Advanced use of classes and resources, under X.
69* Lucid Resources:: X resources for Lucid menus.
70* Motif Resources:: X resources for Motif menus.
71@end menu
72
73@node Action Arguments
74@appendixsec Action Arguments
75
76 Here is a table of the action arguments and options:
77
78@table @samp
79@item @var{file}
80Visit @var{file} using @code{find-file}. @xref{Visiting}.
81
82@item +@var{linenum} @var{file}
83Visit @var{file} using @code{find-file}, then go to line number
84@var{linenum} in it.
85
86@need 3000
87@item -l @var{file}
88@itemx --load=@var{file}
89Load a Lisp library named @var{file} with the function @code{load}.
90@xref{Lisp Libraries}. The library can be found either in the current
91directory, or in the Emacs library search path as specified
92with @code{EMACSLOADPATH} (@pxref{General Variables}).
93
94@item -f @var{function}
95@itemx --funcall=@var{function}
96Call Lisp function @var{function} with no arguments.
97
98@item --eval @var{expression}
99Evaluate Lisp expression @var{expression}.
100
101@item --insert=@var{file}
102Insert the contents of @var{file} into the current buffer. This is like
103what @kbd{M-x insert-file} does. @xref{Misc File Ops}.
104
105@item --kill
106Exit from Emacs without asking for confirmation.
107@end table
108
109@vindex command-line-args
110 The init file can access the values of the action arguments as the
111elements of a list in the variable @code{command-line-args}. The init
112file can override the normal processing of the action arguments, or
113define new ones, by reading and setting this variable.
114
115@node Initial Options
116@appendixsec Initial Options
117
118 The initial options specify parameters for the Emacs session. This
119section describes the more general initial options; some other options
120specifically related to X Windows appear in the following sections.
121
122 Some initial options affect the loading of init files. The normal
123actions of Emacs are to first load @file{site-start.el} if it exists,
124then your own init file @file{~/.emacs} if it exists, and finally
125@file{default.el} if it exists; certain options prevent loading of some
126of these files or substitute other files for them.
127
128@table @samp
129@item -t @var{device}
130@itemx --terminal=@var{device}
131Use @var{device} as the device for terminal input and output.
132
133@item -d @var{display}
134@itemx --display=@var{display}
135Use the X Window System and use the display named @var{display} to open
136the initial Emacs frame.
137
138@item -nw
139@itemx --no-windows
140Don't communicate directly with X, disregarding the @code{DISPLAY}
141environment variable even if it is set.
142
143@need 3000
144@cindex batch mode
145@item -batch
146@itemx --batch
147Run Emacs in @dfn{batch mode}, which means that the text being edited is
148not displayed and the standard terminal interrupt characters such as
149@kbd{C-z} and @kbd{C-c} continue to have their normal effect. Emacs in
150batch mode outputs to @code{stderr} only what would normally be printed
151in the echo area under program control.
152
153Batch mode is used for running programs written in Emacs Lisp from
154shell scripts, makefiles, and so on. Normally the @samp{-l} option
155or @samp{-f} option will be used as well, to invoke a Lisp program
156to do the batch processing.
157
158@samp{-batch} implies @samp{-q} (do not load an init file). It also causes
159Emacs to kill itself after all command options have been processed. In
160addition, auto-saving is not done except in buffers for which it has been
161explicitly requested.
162
163@item -q
164@itemx --no-init-file
165Do not load your Emacs init file @file{~/.emacs}, or @file{default.el}
166either.
167
168@item --no-site-file
169Do not load @file{site-start.el}. The options @samp{-q}, @samp{-u}
170and @samp{-batch} have no effect on the loading of this file---this is
171the only option that blocks it.
172
173@item -u @var{user}
174@itemx --user=@var{user}
175Load @var{user}'s Emacs init file @file{~@var{user}/.emacs} instead of
176your own.
177
178@item --debug-init
179Enable the Emacs Lisp debugger for errors in the init file.
180
181@item --unibyte
182@cindex unibyte operation
183Set up to do almost everything with single-byte buffers and strings.
184All buffers and strings are unibyte unless you (or a Lisp program)
185explicitly ask for a multibyte buffer or string. Setting the
186environment variable @code{EMACS_UNIBYTE} has the same effect.
187
188@item --multibyte
189Inhibit the effect of @code{EMACS_UNIBYTE}, so that Emacs
190uses multibyte characters by default, as usual.
191@end table
192
193@node Command Example
194@appendixsec Command Argument Example
195
196 Here is an example of using Emacs with arguments and options. It
197assumes you have a Lisp program file called @file{hack-c.el} which, when
198loaded, performs some useful operation on the current buffer, expected
199to be a C program.
200
201@example
202emacs -batch foo.c -l hack-c -f save-buffer >& log
203@end example
204
205@noindent
206This says to visit @file{foo.c}, load @file{hack-c.el} (which makes
207changes in the visited file), save @file{foo.c} (note that
208@code{save-buffer} is the function that @kbd{C-x C-s} is bound to), and
209then exit back to the shell (because of @samp{-batch}). @samp{-batch}
210also guarantees there will be no problem redirecting output to
211@file{log}, because Emacs will not assume that it has a display terminal
212to work with.
213
214@node Resume Arguments
215@appendixsec Resuming Emacs with Arguments
216
217 You can specify action arguments for Emacs when you resume it after
218a suspension. To prepare for this, put the following code in your
219@file{.emacs} file (@pxref{Hooks}):
220
221@example
222(add-hook 'suspend-hook 'resume-suspend-hook)
223(add-hook 'suspend-resume-hook 'resume-process-args)
224@end example
225
226 As further preparation, you must execute the shell script
227@file{emacs.csh} (if you use csh as your shell) or @file{emacs.bash} (if
228you use bash as your shell). These scripts define an alias named
229@code{edit}, which will resume Emacs giving it new command line
230arguments such as files to visit.
231
232 Only action arguments work properly when you resume Emacs. Initial
233arguments are not recognized---it's too late to execute them anyway.
234
235 Note that resuming Emacs (with or without arguments) must be done from
236within the shell that is the parent of the Emacs job. This is why
237@code{edit} is an alias rather than a program or a shell script. It is
238not possible to implement a resumption command that could be run from
239other subjobs of the shell; no way to define a command that could be
240made the value of @code{EDITOR}, for example. Therefore, this feature
241does not take the place of the Emacs Server feature (@pxref{Emacs
242Server}).
243
244 The aliases use the Emacs Server feature if you appear to have a
245server Emacs running. However, they cannot determine this with complete
246accuracy. They may think that a server is still running when in
247actuality you have killed that Emacs, because the file
248@file{/tmp/.esrv@dots{}} still exists. If this happens, find that
249file and delete it.
250
251@node Environment
252@appendixsec Environment Variables
253@cindex environment variables
254
255This appendix describes how Emacs uses environment variables. An
256environment variable is a string passed from the operating system to
257Emacs, and the collection of environment variables is known as the
258environment. Environment variable names are case sensitive and it is
259conventional to use upper case letters only.
260
261Because environment variables come from the operating system there is no
262general way to set them; it depends on the operating system and
263especially the shell that you are using. For example, here's how to set
264the environment variable @code{ORGANIZATION} to @samp{not very much}
265using bash:
266
267@example
268export ORGANIZATION="not very much"
269@end example
270
271@noindent
272and here's how to do it in csh or tcsh:
273
274@example
275setenv ORGANIZATION "not very much"
276@end example
277
278When Emacs is set-up to use the X windowing system, it inherits the
279use of a large number of environment variables from the X library. See
280the X documentation for more information.
281
282@menu
283* General Variables:: Environment variables that all versions of Emacs use.
284* Misc Variables:: Certain system-specific variables.
285@end menu
286
287@node General Variables
288@appendixsubsec General Variables
289
290@table @code
291@item AUTHORCOPY
292The name of a file used to archive news articles posted with the @sc{gnus}
293package.
294@item CDPATH
295Used by the @code{cd} command to search for the directory you specify,
296when you specify a relative directory name.
297@item DOMAINNAME
298The name of the Internet domain that the machine running Emacs is
299located in. Used by the @sc{gnus} package.
300@item EMACS_UNIBYTE
301@cindex unibyte operation
302Defining this environment variable directs Emacs to do almost everything
303with single-byte buffers and strings. It is equivalent to using the
304@samp{--unibyte} command-line option on each invocation. @xref{Initial
305Options}.
306@item EMACSDATA
307Used to initialize the variable @code{data-directory} used to locate the
308architecture-independent files that come with Emacs. Setting this
309variable overrides the setting in @file{paths.h} when Emacs was built.
310@item EMACSLOADPATH
311A colon-separated list of directories from which to load Emacs Lisp
312files. Setting this variable overrides the setting in @file{paths.h}
313when Emacs was built.
314@item EMACSLOCKDIR
315The directory that Emacs places lock files---files used to protect
316users from editing the same files simultaneously. Setting this variable
317overrides the setting in @file{paths.h} when Emacs was built.
318@item EMACSPATH
319The location of Emacs-specific binaries. Setting this variable
320overrides the setting in @file{paths.h} when Emacs was built.
321@item ESHELL
322Used for shell-mode to override the @code{SHELL} environment variable.
323@item HISTFILE
324The name of the file that shell commands are saved in between logins.
325This variable defaults to @file{~/.history} if you use (t)csh as shell,
326to @file{~/.bash_history} if you use bash, to @file{~/.sh_history} if
327you use ksh, and to @file{~/.history} otherwise.
328@item HOME
329The location of the user's files in the directory tree; used for
330expansion of file names starting with a tilde (@file{~}). On MS-DOS, it
331defaults to the directory from which Emacs was started, with @samp{/bin}
332removed from the end if it was present.
333@item HOSTNAME
334The name of the machine that Emacs is running on.
335@item INCPATH
336A colon-separated list of directories. Used by the @code{complete} package
337to search for files.
338@item INFOPATH
339A colon-separated list of directories holding info files. Setting this
340variable overrides the setting in @file{paths.el} when Emacs was built.
341@item LANG
342@itemx LC_ALL
343@itemx LC_CTYPE
344The user's preferred locale. A locale name which contains
345@samp{8859-@var{n}}, @samp{8859_@var{n}} or @samp{8859@var{n}}, where
346@var{n} is between 1 and 4, automatically specifies the
347@samp{Latin-@var{n}} language environment when Emacs starts up. If
348@var{n} is 9, that specifies @samp{Latin-5}.
349@item LOGNAME
350The user's login name. See also @code{USER}.
351@item MAIL
352The name of the user's system mail inbox.
353@item MAILRC
354Name of file containing mail aliases. This defaults to
355@file{~/.mailrc}.
356@item MH
357Name of setup file for the mh system. This defaults to
358@file{~/.mh_profile}.
359@item NAME
360The real-world name of the user.
361@item NNTPSERVER
362The name of the news server. Used by the mh and @sc{gnus} packages.
363@item ORGANIZATION
364The name of the organization to which you belong. Used for setting the
365`Organization:' header in your posts from the @sc{gnus} package.
366@item PATH
367A colon-separated list of directories in which executables reside. (On
368MS-DOS, it is semicolon-separated instead.) This variable is used to
369set the Emacs Lisp variable @code{exec-path} which you should consider
370to use instead.
371@item PWD
372If set, this should be the default directory when Emacs was started.
373@item REPLYTO
374If set, this specifies an initial value for the variable
375@code{mail-default-reply-to}. @xref{Mail Headers}.
376@item SAVEDIR
377The name of a directory in which news articles are saved by default.
378Used by the @sc{gnus} package.
379@item SHELL
380The name of an interpreter used to parse and execute programs run from
381inside Emacs.
382@item TERM
383The name of the terminal that Emacs is running on. The variable must be
384set unless Emacs is run in batch mode. On MS-DOS, it defaults to
385@samp{internal}, which specifies a built-in terminal emulation that
386handles the machine's own display.
387@item TERMCAP
388The name of the termcap library file describing how to program the
389terminal specified by the @code{TERM} variable. This defaults to
390@file{/etc/termcap}.
391@item TMPDIR
392Used by the Emerge package as a prefix for temporary files.
393@item TZ
394This specifies the current time zone and possibly also daylight savings
395information. On MS-DOS, the default is based on country code; see the
396file @file{msdos.c} for details.
397@item USER
398The user's login name. See also @code{LOGNAME}. On MS-DOS, this
399defaults to @samp{root}.
400@item VERSION_CONTROL
401Used to initialize the @code{version-control} variable (@pxref{Backup
402Names}).
403@end table
404
405@node Misc Variables
406@appendixsubsec Miscellaneous Variables
407
408These variables are used only on particular configurations:
409
410@table @code
411@item COMSPEC
412On MS-DOS, the name of the command interpreter to use. This is used to
413make a default value for the @code{SHELL} environment variable.
414
415@item NAME
416On MS-DOS, this variable defaults to the value of the @code{USER}
417variable.
418
419@item TEMP
420@itemx TMP
421On MS-DOS, these specify the name of the directory for storing temporary
422files in.
423
424@item EMACSTEST
425On MS-DOS, this specifies a file to use to log the operation of the
426internal terminal emulator. This feature is useful for submitting bug
427reports.
428
429@item EMACSCOLORS
430Used on MS-DOS systems to set screen colors early, so that the screen
431won't momentarily flash the default colors when Emacs starts up. The
432value of this variable should be two-character encoding of the
433foreground (the first character) and the background (the second
434character) colors of the default face. Each character should be the
435hexadecimal code for the desired color on a standard PC text-mode
436display.
437
438The PC display usually supports only eight background colors. However,
439Emacs switches the DOS display to a mode where all 16 colors can be used
440for the background, so all four bits of the background color are
441actually used.
442
443@item WINDOW_GFX
444Used when initializing the Sun windows system.
445@end table
446
447@node Display X
448@appendixsec Specifying the Display Name
449@cindex display name (X Windows)
450@cindex @code{DISPLAY} environment variable
451
452 The environment variable @code{DISPLAY} tells all X clients, including
453Emacs, where to display their windows. Its value is set up by default
454in ordinary circumstances, when you start an X server and run jobs
455locally. Occasionally you may need to specify the display yourself; for
456example, if you do a remote login and want to run a client program
457remotely, displaying on your local screen.
458
459 With Emacs, the main reason people change the default display is to
460let them log into another system, run Emacs on that system, but have the
461window displayed at their local terminal. You might need to use login
462to another system because the files you want to edit are there, or
463because the Emacs executable file you want to run is there.
464
465 The syntax of the @code{DISPLAY} environment variable is
466@samp{@var{host}:@var{display}.@var{screen}}, where @var{host} is the
467host name of the X Window System server machine, @var{display} is an
468arbitrarily-assigned number that distinguishes your server (X terminal)
469from other servers on the same machine, and @var{screen} is a
470rarely-used field that allows an X server to control multiple terminal
471screens. The period and the @var{screen} field are optional. If
472included, @var{screen} is usually zero.
473
474 For example, if your host is named @samp{glasperle} and your server is
475the first (or perhaps the only) server listed in the configuration, your
476@code{DISPLAY} is @samp{glasperle:0.0}.
477
478 You can specify the display name explicitly when you run Emacs, either
479by changing the @code{DISPLAY} variable, or with the option @samp{-d
480@var{display}} or @samp{--display=@var{display}}. Here is an example:
481
482@smallexample
483emacs --display=glasperle:0 &
484@end smallexample
485
486 You can inhibit the direct use of X with the @samp{-nw} option. This
487is also an initial option. It tells Emacs to display using ordinary
488ASCII on its controlling terminal.
489
490 Sometimes, security arrangements prevent a program on a remote system
491from displaying on your local system. In this case, trying to run Emacs
492produces messages like this:
493
494@smallexample
495Xlib: connection to "glasperle:0.0" refused by server
496@end smallexample
497
498@noindent
499You might be able to overcome this problem by using the @code{xhost}
500command on the local system to give permission for access from your
501remote machine.
502
503@node Font X
504@appendixsec Font Specification Options
505@cindex font name (X Windows)
506
507 By default, Emacs displays text in the font named @samp{9x15}, which
508makes each character nine pixels wide and fifteen pixels high. You can
509specify a different font on your command line through the option
510@samp{-fn @var{name}}.
511
512@table @samp
513@item -fn @var{name}
514Use font @var{name} as the default font.
515
516@item --font=@var{name}
517@samp{--font} is an alias for @samp{-fn}.
518@end table
519
520 Under X, each font has a long name which consists of eleven words or
521numbers, separated by dashes. Some fonts also have shorter
522nicknames---@samp{9x15} is such a nickname. You can use either kind of
523name. You can use wildcard patterns for the font name; then Emacs lets
524X choose one of the fonts that match the pattern. Here is an example,
525which happens to specify the font whose nickname is @samp{6x13}:
526
527@smallexample
528emacs -fn "-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-*-*-*-c-60-iso8859-1" &
529@end smallexample
530
531@noindent
532You can also specify the font in your @file{.Xdefaults} file:
533
534@smallexample
535emacs.font: -misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-*-*-*-c-60-iso8859-1
536@end smallexample
537
538 A long font name has the following form:
539
540@smallexample
541-@var{maker}-@var{family}-@var{weight}-@var{slant}-@var{widthtype}-@var{style}@dots{}
542@dots{}-@var{pixels}-@var{height}-@var{horiz}-@var{vert}-@var{spacing}-@var{width}-@var{charset}
543@end smallexample
544
545@table @var
546@item family
547This is the name of the font family---for example, @samp{courier}.
548@item weight
549This is normally @samp{bold}, @samp{medium} or @samp{light}. Other
550words may appear here in some font names.
551@item slant
552This is @samp{r} (roman), @samp{i} (italic), @samp{o} (oblique),
553@samp{ri} (reverse italic), or @samp{ot} (other).
554@item widthtype
555This is normally @samp{condensed}, @samp{extended}, @samp{semicondensed}
556or @samp{normal}. Other words may appear here in some font names.
557@item style
558This is an optional additional style name. Usually it is empty---most
559long font names have two hyphens in a row at this point.
560@item pixels
561This is the font height, in pixels.
562@item height
563This is the font height on the screen, measured in tenths of a printer's
564point---approximately 1/720 of an inch. In other words, it is the point
565size of the font, times ten. For a given vertical resolution,
566@var{height} and @var{pixels} are proportional; therefore, it is common
567to specify just one of them and use @samp{*} for the other.
568@item horiz
569This is the horizontal resolution, in pixels per inch, of the screen for
570which the font is intended.
571@item vert
572This is the vertical resolution, in dots per inch, of the screen for
573which the font is intended. Normally the resolution of the fonts on
574your system is the right value for your screen; therefore, you normally
575specify @samp{*} for this and @var{horiz}.
576@item spacing
577This is @samp{m} (monospace), @samp{p} (proportional) or @samp{c}
578(character cell). Emacs can use @samp{m} and @samp{c} fonts.
579@item width
580This is the average character width, in pixels, multiplied by ten.
581@item charset
582This is the character set that the font depicts.
583Normally you should use @samp{iso8859-1}.
584@end table
585
586 Use only fixed-width fonts---that is, fonts in which all characters
587have the same width; Emacs cannot yet handle display properly for
588variable-width fonts. Any font with @samp{m} or @samp{c} in the
589@var{spacing} field of the long name is a fixed-width font. Here's how
590to use the @code{xlsfonts} program to list all the fixed-width fonts
591available on your system:
592
593@example
594xlsfonts -fn '*x*' | egrep "^[0-9]+x[0-9]+"
595xlsfonts -fn '*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-m*'
596xlsfonts -fn '*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-c*'
597@end example
598
599@noindent
600To see what a particular font looks like, use the @code{xfd} command.
601For example:
602
603@example
604xfd -fn 6x13
605@end example
606
607@noindent
608displays the entire font @samp{6x13}.
609
610 While running Emacs, you can set the font of the current frame
611(@pxref{Frame Parameters}) or for a specific kind of text
612(@pxref{Faces}).
613
614@node Colors X
615@appendixsec Window Color Options
616@cindex color of window (X Windows)
617
618 On a color display, you can specify which color to use for various
619parts of the Emacs display. To find out what colors are available on
620your system, look at the @file{/usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt} file. If you do
621not specify colors, the default for the background is white and the
622default for all other colors is black. On a monochrome display, the
623foreground is black, the background is white, and the border is gray if
624the display supports that.
625
626 Here is a list of the options for specifying colors:
627
628@table @samp
629@item -fg @var{color}
630@itemx --foreground-color=@var{color}
631Specify the foreground color.
632@item -bg @var{color}
633@itemx --background-color=@var{color}
634Specify the background color.
635@item -bd @var{color}
636@itemx --border-color=@var{color}
637Specify the color of the border of the X window.
638@item -cr @var{color}
639@itemx --cursor-color=@var{color}
640Specify the color of the Emacs cursor which indicates where point is.
641@item -ms @var{color}
642@itemx --mouse-color=@var{color}
643Specify the color for the mouse cursor when the mouse is in the Emacs window.
644@item -r
645@itemx --reverse-video
646Reverse video---swap the foreground and background colors.
647@end table
648
649 For example, to use a coral mouse cursor and a slate blue text cursor,
650enter:
651
652@example
653emacs -ms coral -cr 'slate blue' &
654@end example
655
656 You can reverse the foreground and background colors through the
657@samp{-r} option or with the X resource @samp{reverseVideo}.
658
659@node Window Size X
660@appendixsec Options for Window Geometry
661@cindex geometry (X Windows)
662
663 The @samp{-geometry} option controls the size and position of the
664initial Emacs frame. Here is the format for specifying the window
665geometry:
666
667@table @samp
668@item -g @var{width}x@var{height}@r{@{}+-@r{@}}@var{xoffset}@r{@{}+-@r{@}}@var{yoffset}
669Specify window size @var{width} and @var{height} (measured in character
670columns and lines), and positions @var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset}
671(measured in pixels).
672
673@item --geometry=@var{width}x@var{height}@r{@{}+-@r{@}}@var{xoffset}@r{@{}+-@r{@}}@var{yoffset}
674This is another way of writing the same thing.
675@end table
676
677@noindent
678@code{@r{@{}+-@r{@}}} means either a plus sign or a minus sign. A plus
679sign before @var{xoffset} means it is the distance from the left side of
680the screen; a minus sign means it counts from the right side. A plus
681sign before @var{yoffset} means it is the distance from the top of the
682screen, and a minus sign there indicates the distance from the bottom.
683The values @var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset} may themselves be positive or
684negative, but that doesn't change their meaning, only their direction.
685
686 Emacs uses the same units as @code{xterm} does to interpret the geometry.
687The @var{width} and @var{height} are measured in characters, so a large font
688creates a larger frame than a small font. The @var{xoffset} and
689@var{yoffset} are measured in pixels.
690
691 Since the mode line and the echo area occupy the last 2 lines of the
692frame, the height of the initial text window is 2 less than the height
693specified in your geometry. In non-X-toolkit versions of Emacs,
694the menu bar also takes one line of the specified number.
695
696 You do not have to specify all of the fields in the geometry
697specification.
698
699 If you omit both @var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset}, the window manager
700decides where to put the Emacs frame, possibly by letting you place
701it with the mouse. For example, @samp{164x55} specifies a window 164
702columns wide, enough for two ordinary width windows side by side, and 55
703lines tall.
704
705 The default width for Emacs is 80 characters and the default height is
70640 lines. You can omit either the width or the height or both. If
707you start the geometry with an integer, Emacs interprets it as the
708width. If you start with an @samp{x} followed by an integer, Emacs
709interprets it as the height. Thus, @samp{81} specifies just the width;
710@samp{x45} specifies just the height.
711
712 If you start with @samp{+} or @samp{-}, that introduces an offset,
713which means both sizes are omitted. Thus, @samp{-3} specifies the
714@var{xoffset} only. (If you give just one offset, it is always
715@var{xoffset}.) @samp{+3-3} specifies both the @var{xoffset} and the
716@var{yoffset}, placing the frame near the bottom left of the screen.
717
718 You can specify a default for any or all of the fields in
719@file{.Xdefaults} file, and then override selected fields with a
720@samp{--geometry} option.
721
722@node Borders X
723@appendixsec Internal and External Borders
724@cindex borders (X Windows)
725
726 An Emacs frame has an internal border and an external border. The
727internal border is an extra strip of the background color around all
728four edges of the frame. Emacs itself adds the internal border. The
729external border is added by the window manager outside the internal
730border; it may contain various boxes you can click on to move or iconify
731the window.
732
733@table @samp
734@item -ib @var{width}
735@itemx --internal-border=@var{width}
736Specify @var{width} as the width of the internal border.
737
738@item -bw @var{width}
739@itemx --border-width=@var{width}
740Specify @var{width} as the width of the main border.
741@end table
742
743 When you specify the size of the frame, that does not count the
744borders. The frame's position is measured from the outside edge of the
745external border.
746
747 Use the @samp{-ib @var{n}} option to specify an internal border
748@var{n} pixels wide. The default is 1. Use @samp{-bw @var{n}} to
749specify the width of the external border (though the window manager may
750not pay attention to what you specify). The default width of the
751external border is 2.
752
753@node Title X
754@appendixsec Frame Titles
755
756 An Emacs frame may or may not have a specified title. The frame
757title, if specified, appears in window decorations and icons as the name
758of the frame. If an Emacs frame has no specified title, the default
759title is the name of the executable program (if there is only one frame)
760or the selected window's buffer name (if there is more than one frame).
761
762 You can specify a title for the initial Emacs frame with a command
763line option:
764
765@table @samp
766@item -title @var{title}
767@itemx --title=@var{title}
768@itemx -T @var{title}
769Specify @var{title} as the title for the initial Emacs frame.
770@end table
771
772 The @samp{--name} option (@pxref{Resources X}) also specifies the title
773for the initial Emacs frame.
774
775@node Icons X
776@appendixsec Icons
777@cindex icons (X Windows)
778
779 Most window managers allow the user to ``iconify'' a frame, removing
780it from sight, and leaving a small, distinctive ``icon'' window in its
781place. Clicking on the icon window makes the frame itself appear again.
782If you have many clients running at once, you can avoid cluttering up
783the screen by iconifying most of the clients.
784
785@table @samp
786@item -i
787@itemx --icon-type
788Use a picture of a gnu as the Emacs icon.
789
790@item -iconic
791@itemx --iconic
792Start Emacs in iconified state.
793@end table
794
795 The @samp{-i} or @samp{--icon-type} option tells Emacs to use an icon
796window containing a picture of the GNU gnu. If omitted, Emacs lets the
797window manager choose what sort of icon to use---usually just a small
798rectangle containing the frame's title.
799
800 The @samp{-iconic} option tells Emacs to begin running as an icon,
801rather than opening a frame right away. In this situation, the icon
802window provides only indication that Emacs has started; the usual text
803frame doesn't appear until you deiconify it.
804
805@node Resources X
806@appendixsec X Resources
807@cindex resources
808
809 Programs running under the X Window System organize their user options
810under a hierarchy of classes and resources. You can specify default
811values for these options in your X resources file, usually named
812@file{~/.Xdefaults}.
813
814 Each line in the file specifies a value for one option or for a
815collection of related options, for one program or for several programs
816(optionally even for all programs).
817
818 Programs define named resources with particular meanings. They also
819define how to group resources into named classes. For instance, in
820Emacs, the @samp{internalBorder} resource controls the width of the
821internal border, and the @samp{borderWidth} resource controls the width
822of the external border. Both of these resources are part of the
823@samp{BorderWidth} class. Case distinctions are significant in these
824names.
825
826 In @file{~/.Xdefaults}, you can specify a value for a single resource
827on one line, like this:
828
829@example
830emacs.borderWidth: 2
831@end example
832
833@noindent
834Or you can use a class name to specify the same value for all resources
835in that class. Here's an example:
836
837@example
838emacs.BorderWidth: 2
839@end example
840
841 If you specify a value for a class, it becomes the default for all
842resources in that class. You can specify values for individual
843resources as well; these override the class value, for those particular
844resources. Thus, this example specifies 2 as the default width for all
845borders, but overrides this value with 4 for the external border:
846
847@example
848emacs.Borderwidth: 2
849emacs.borderwidth: 4
850@end example
851
852 The order in which the lines appear in the file does not matter.
853Also, command-line options always override the X resources file.
854
855 The string @samp{emacs} in the examples above is also a resource
856name. It actually represents the name of the executable file that you
857invoke to run Emacs. If Emacs is installed under a different name, it
858looks for resources under that name instead of @samp{emacs}.
859
860@table @samp
861@item -name @var{name}
862@itemx --name=@var{name}
863Use @var{name} as the resource name (and the title) for the initial
864Emacs frame. This option does not affect subsequent frames, but Lisp
865programs can specify frame names when they create frames.
866
867If you don't specify this option, the default is to use the Emacs
868executable's name as the resource name.
869
870@item -xrm @var{resource-values}
871@itemx --xrm=@var{resource-values}
872Specify X resource values for this Emacs job (see below).
873@end table
874
875 For consistency, @samp{-name} also specifies the name to use for
876other resource values that do not belong to any particular frame.
877
878 The resources that name Emacs invocations also belong to a class; its
879name is @samp{Emacs}. If you write @samp{Emacs} instead of
880@samp{emacs}, the resource applies to all frames in all Emacs jobs,
881regardless of frame titles and regardless of the name of the executable
882file. Here is an example:
883
884@example
885Emacs.BorderWidth: 2
886Emacs.borderWidth: 4
887@end example
888
889 You can specify a string of additional resource values for Emacs to
890use with the command line option @samp{-xrm @var{resources}}. The text
891@var{resources} should have the same format that you would use inside a file
892of X resources. To include multiple resource specifications in
893@var{data}, put a newline between them, just as you would in a file.
894You can also use @samp{#include "@var{filename}"} to include a file full
895of resource specifications. Resource values specified with @samp{-xrm}
896take precedence over all other resource specifications.
897
898 The following table lists the resource names that designate options
899for Emacs, each with the class that it belongs to:
900
901@table @asis
902@item @code{background} (class @code{Background})
903Background color name.
904
905@item @code{bitmapIcon} (class @code{BitmapIcon})
906Use a bitmap icon (a picture of a gnu) if @samp{on}, let the window
907manager choose an icon if @samp{off}.
908
909@item @code{borderColor} (class @code{BorderColor})
910Color name for the external border.
911
912@item @code{borderWidth} (class @code{BorderWidth})
913Width in pixels of the external border.
914
915@item @code{cursorColor} (class @code{Foreground})
916Color name for text cursor (point).
917
918@item @code{font} (class @code{Font})
919Font name for text (or fontset name, @pxref{Fontsets}).
920
921@item @code{foreground} (class @code{Foreground})
922Color name for text.
923
924@item @code{geometry} (class @code{Geometry})
925Window size and position. Be careful not to specify this resource as
926@samp{emacs*geometry}, because that may affect individual menus as well
927as the Emacs frame itself.
928
929If this resource specifies a position, that position applies only to the
930initial Emacs frame (or, in the case of a resource for a specific frame
931name, only that frame). However, the size if specified here applies to
932all frames.
933
934@item @code{iconName} (class @code{Title})
935Name to display in the icon.
936
937@item @code{internalBorder} (class @code{BorderWidth})
938Width in pixels of the internal border.
939
940@item @code{menuBar} (class @code{MenuBar})
941Give frames menu bars if @samp{on}; don't have menu bars if @samp{off}.
942
943@item @code{minibuffer} (class @code{Minibuffer})
944If @samp{none}, don't make a minibuffer in this frame.
945It will use a separate minibuffer frame instead.
946
947@item @code{paneFont} (class @code{Font})
948Font name for menu pane titles, in non-toolkit versions of Emacs.
949
950@item @code{pointerColor} (class @code{Foreground})
951Color of the mouse cursor.
952
953@item @code{reverseVideo} (class @code{ReverseVideo})
954Switch foreground and background default colors if @samp{on}, use colors as
955specified if @samp{off}.
956
957@item @code{verticalScrollBars} (class @code{ScrollBars})
958Give frames scroll bars if @samp{on}; don't have scroll bars if
959@samp{off}.
960
961@item @code{selectionFont} (class @code{Font})
962Font name for pop-up menu items, in non-toolkit versions of Emacs. (For
963toolkit versions, see @ref{Lucid Resources}, also see @ref{Motif
964Resources}.)
965
966@item @code{title} (class @code{Title})
967Name to display in the title bar of the initial Emacs frame.
968@end table
969
970 Here are resources for controlling the appearance of particular faces
971(@pxref{Faces}):
972
973@table @code
974@item @var{face}.attributeFont
975Font for face @var{face}.
976@item @var{face}.attributeForeground
977Foreground color for face @var{face}.
978@item @var{face}.attributeBackground
979Background color for face @var{face}.
980@item @var{face}.attributeUnderline
981Underline flag for face @var{face}. Use @samp{on} or @samp{true} for
982yes.
983@end table
984
985@node Lucid Resources
986@section Lucid Menu X Resources
987@cindex Menu X Resources (Lucid widgets)
988@cindex Lucid Widget X Resources
989
990 If the Emacs installed at your site was built to use the X toolkit
991with the Lucid menu widgets, then the menu bar is a separate widget and
992has its own resources. The resource names contain @samp{pane.menubar}
993(following, as always, the name of the Emacs invocation or @samp{Emacs}
994which stands for all Emacs invocations). Specify them like this:
995
996@example
997Emacs.pane.menubar.@var{resource}: @var{value}
998@end example
999
1000@noindent
1001For example, to specify the font @samp{8x16} for the menu-bar items,
1002write this:
1003
1004@example
1005Emacs.pane.menubar.font: 8x16
1006@end example
1007
1008@noindent
1009Resources for @emph{non-menubar} toolkit pop-up menus have
1010@samp{menu*}, in like fashion. For example, to specify the font
1011@samp{8x16} for the pop-up menu items, write this:
1012
1013@example
1014Emacs.menu*.font: 8x16
1015@end example
1016
1017@noindent
1018For dialog boxes, use @samp{dialog} instead of @samp{menu}:
1019
1020@example
1021Emacs.dialog*.font: 8x16
1022@end example
1023
1024@noindent
1025Experience shows that on some systems you may need to add
1026@samp{shell.}@: before the @samp{pane.menubar} or @samp{menu*}. On
1027some other systems, you must not add @samp{shell.}.
1028
1029 Here is a list of the specific resources for menu bars and pop-up menus:
1030
1031@table @code
1032@item font
1033Font for menu item text.
1034@item foreground
1035Color of the foreground.
1036@item background
1037Color of the background.
1038@item buttonForeground
1039In the menu bar, the color of the foreground for a selected item.
1040@item horizontalSpacing
1041Horizontal spacing in pixels between items. Default is 3.
1042@item verticalSpacing
1043Vertical spacing in pixels between items. Default is 1.
1044@item arrowSpacing
1045Horizontal spacing between the arrow (which indicates a submenu) and
1046the associated text. Default is 10.
1047@item shadowThickness
1048Thickness of shadow line around the widget.
1049@end table
1050
1051@node Motif Resources
1052@section Motif Menu X Resources
1053@cindex Menu X Resources (Motif widgets)
1054@cindex Motif Widget X Resources
1055
1056 If the Emacs installed at your site was built to use the X toolkit
1057with the Motif widgets, then the menu bar is a separate widget and has
1058its own resources. The resource names contain @samp{pane.menubar}
1059(following, as always, the name of the Emacs invocation or @samp{Emacs}
1060which stands for all Emacs invocations). Specify them like this:
1061
1062@smallexample
1063Emacs.pane.menubar.@var{subwidget}.@var{resource}: @var{value}
1064@end smallexample
1065
1066 Each individual string in the menu bar is a subwidget; the subwidget's
1067name is the same as the menu item string. For example, the word
1068@samp{Files} in the menu bar is part of a subwidget named
1069@samp{emacs.pane.menubar.Files}. Most likely, you want to specify the
1070same resources for the whole menu bar. To do this, use @samp{*} instead
1071of a specific subwidget name. For example, to specify the font
1072@samp{8x16} for the menu-bar items, write this:
1073
1074@smallexample
1075Emacs.pane.menubar.*.fontList: 8x16
1076@end smallexample
1077
1078@noindent
1079This also specifies the resource value for submenus.
1080
1081 Each item in a submenu in the menu bar also has its own name for X
1082resources; for example, the @samp{Files} submenu has an item named
1083@samp{Save Buffer}. A resource specification for a submenu item looks
1084like this:
1085
1086@smallexample
1087Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.@var{menu}.@var{item}.@var{resource}: @var{value}
1088@end smallexample
1089
1090@noindent
1091For example, here's how to specify the font for the @samp{Save Buffer}
1092item:
1093
1094@smallexample
1095Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.Files.Save Buffer.fontList: 8x16
1096@end smallexample
1097
1098@noindent
1099For an item in a second-level submenu, such as @samp{Check Message}
1100under @samp{Spell} under @samp{Edit}, the resource fits this template:
1101
1102@smallexample
1103Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.popup_*.@var{menu}.@var{resource}: @var{value}
1104@end smallexample
1105
1106@noindent
1107For example,
1108
1109@smallexample
1110Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.popup_*.Spell.Check Message: @var{value}
1111@end smallexample
1112
1113 It's impossible to specify a resource for all the menu-bar items
1114without also specifying it for the submenus as well. So if you want the
1115submenu items to look different from the menu bar itself, you must ask
1116for that in two steps. First, specify the resource for all of them;
1117then, override the value for submenus alone. Here is an example:
1118
1119@smallexample
1120Emacs.pane.menubar.*.fontList: 8x16
1121Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.fontList: 8x16
1122@end smallexample
1123
1124@noindent
1125For toolkit pop-up menus, use @samp{menu*} instead of
1126@samp{pane.menubar}. For example, to specify the font @samp{8x16} for
1127the pop-up menu items, write this:
1128
1129@smallexample
1130Emacs.menu*.fontList: 8x16
1131@end smallexample
1132
1133@iftex
1134@medbreak
1135@end iftex
1136 Here is a list of the specific resources for menu bars and pop-up menus:
1137
1138@table @code
1139@item armColor
1140The color to show in an armed button.
1141@item fontList
1142The font to use.
1143@item marginBottom
1144@itemx marginHeight
1145@itemx marginLeft
1146@itemx marginRight
1147@itemx marginTop
1148@itemx marginWidth
1149Amount of space to leave around the item, within the border.
1150@item borderWidth
1151The width of border around the menu item, on all sides.
1152@item shadowThickness
1153The width of the border shadow.
1154@item bottomShadowColor
1155The color for the border shadow, on the bottom and the right.
1156@item topShadowColor
1157The color for the border shadow, on the top and the left.
1158@end table