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6bf7aab6 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
6b61353c 2@c Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,93,94,95,97,2001,03,2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6bf7aab6 3@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
21af0bfa 4@node Command Arguments, X Resources, Service, Top
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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
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19starts up. The last file name on your command line becomes the
20current buffer; the other files are also visited in other buffers. If
21there are two files, they are both displayed; otherwise the last file
22is displayed along with a buffer list that shows what other buffers
23there are. As with most programs, the special argument @samp{--} says
24that all subsequent arguments are file names, not options, even if
25they start with @samp{-}.
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26
27 Emacs command options can specify many things, such as the size and
28position of the X window Emacs uses, its colors, and so on. A few
29options support advanced usage, such as running Lisp functions on files
30in batch mode. The sections of this chapter describe the available
31options, arranged according to their purpose.
32
33 There are two ways of writing options: the short forms that start with
34a single @samp{-}, and the long forms that start with @samp{--}. For
35example, @samp{-d} is a short form and @samp{--display} is the
36corresponding long form.
37
38 The long forms with @samp{--} are easier to remember, but longer to
39type. However, you don't have to spell out the whole option name; any
40unambiguous abbreviation is enough. When a long option takes an
41argument, you can use either a space or an equal sign to separate the
42option name and the argument. Thus, you can write either
43@samp{--display sugar-bombs:0.0} or @samp{--display=sugar-bombs:0.0}.
44We recommend an equal sign because it makes the relationship clearer,
45and the tables below always show an equal sign.
46
47@cindex initial options (command line)
48@cindex action options (command line)
6b61353c 49@vindex command-line-args
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50 Most options specify how to initialize Emacs, or set parameters for
51the Emacs session. We call them @dfn{initial options}. A few options
52specify things to do: for example, load libraries, call functions, or
0ec1f115 53terminate Emacs. These are called @dfn{action options}. These and file
6bf7aab6 54names together are called @dfn{action arguments}. Emacs processes all
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55the action arguments in the order they are written. The @file{.emacs} file
56can access the values of the action arguments as the elements of a list in
57the variable @code{command-line-args}.
58
59
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60
61@menu
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62* Action Arguments:: Arguments to visit files, load libraries,
63 and call functions.
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64* Initial Options:: Arguments that take effect while starting Emacs.
65* Command Example:: Examples of using command line arguments.
6b61353c 66* Resume Arguments:: Specifying arguments when you resume a running Emacs.
6bf7aab6 67* Environment:: Environment variables that Emacs uses.
e428626a 68* Display X:: Changing the default display and using remote login.
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69* Font X:: Choosing a font for text, under X.
70* Colors:: Choosing display colors.
e428626a 71* Window Size X:: Start-up window size, under X.
6b61353c 72* Borders X:: Internal and external borders, under X.
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73* Title X:: Specifying the initial frame's title.
74* Icons X:: Choosing what sort of icon to use, under X.
6b61353c 75* Misc X:: Other display options.
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76@end menu
77
78@node Action Arguments
79@appendixsec Action Arguments
80
81 Here is a table of the action arguments and options:
82
83@table @samp
84@item @var{file}
a8575fe5 85@opindex --file
ec22060b 86@itemx --file=@var{file}
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87@opindex --find-file
88@itemx --find-file=@var{file}
89@opindex --visit
90@itemx --visit=@var{file}
a8575fe5 91@cindex visiting files, command-line argument
6da55907 92@vindex inhibit-startup-buffer-menu
6bf7aab6 93Visit @var{file} using @code{find-file}. @xref{Visiting}.
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94If you visit several files at startup in this way, Emacs
95also displays a Buffer Menu buffer to show you what files it
96has visited. You can inhibit that by setting @code{inhibit-startup-buffer-menu} to @code{t}.
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97
98@item +@var{linenum} @var{file}
a8575fe5 99@opindex +@var{linenum}
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100Visit @var{file} using @code{find-file}, then go to line number
101@var{linenum} in it.
102
660872b6 103@item +@var{linenum}:@var{columnnum} @var{file}
660872b6 104Visit @var{file} using @code{find-file}, then go to line number
0ec1f115 105@var{linenum} and put point at column number @var{columnnum}.
660872b6 106
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107@need 3000
108@item -l @var{file}
a8575fe5 109@opindex -l
6bf7aab6 110@itemx --load=@var{file}
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111@opindex --load
112@cindex loading Lisp libraries, command-line argument
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113Load a Lisp library named @var{file} with the function @code{load}.
114@xref{Lisp Libraries}. The library can be found either in the current
115directory, or in the Emacs library search path as specified
60a96371 116with @env{EMACSLOADPATH} (@pxref{General Variables}).
6bf7aab6 117
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118@item -L @var{dir}
119@opindex -L
120@itemx --directory=@var{dir}
121@opindex --directory
122Add directory @var{dir} to the variable @code{load-path}.
123
6bf7aab6 124@item -f @var{function}
a8575fe5 125@opindex -f
6bf7aab6 126@itemx --funcall=@var{function}
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127@opindex --funcall
128@cindex call Lisp functions, command-line argument
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129Call Lisp function @var{function}. If it is an interactive function
130(a command), it reads the arguments interactively just as if you had
131called the same function with a key sequence. Otherwise, it calls the
132function with no arguments.
6bf7aab6 133
ec22060b 134@item --eval=@var{expression}
a8575fe5 135@opindex --eval
ec22060b 136@itemx --execute=@var{expression}
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137@opindex --execute
138@cindex evaluate expression, command-line argument
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139Evaluate Lisp expression @var{expression}.
140
141@item --insert=@var{file}
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142@opindex --insert
143@cindex insert file contents, command-line argument
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144Insert the contents of @var{file} into the current buffer. This is like
145what @kbd{M-x insert-file} does. @xref{Misc File Ops}.
146
147@item --kill
a8575fe5 148@opindex --kill
6bf7aab6 149Exit from Emacs without asking for confirmation.
6bf7aab6 150
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151@item --help
152@opindex --help
153Print a usage message listing all available options, then exit
154successfully.
155
156@item --version
157@opindex --version
158Print Emacs version, then exit successfully.
159@end table
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160
161@node Initial Options
162@appendixsec Initial Options
163
164 The initial options specify parameters for the Emacs session. This
165section describes the more general initial options; some other options
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166specifically related to the X Window System appear in the following
167sections.
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168
169 Some initial options affect the loading of init files. The normal
170actions of Emacs are to first load @file{site-start.el} if it exists,
171then your own init file @file{~/.emacs} if it exists, and finally
172@file{default.el} if it exists; certain options prevent loading of some
173of these files or substitute other files for them.
174
175@table @samp
176@item -t @var{device}
a8575fe5 177@opindex -t
6bf7aab6 178@itemx --terminal=@var{device}
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179@opindex --terminal
180@cindex device for Emacs terminal I/O
6bf7aab6 181Use @var{device} as the device for terminal input and output.
6b61353c 182@samp{--terminal} implies @samp{--no-window-system}.
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183
184@item -d @var{display}
a8575fe5 185@opindex -d
6bf7aab6 186@itemx --display=@var{display}
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187@opindex --display
188@cindex display for Emacs frame
6bf7aab6 189Use the X Window System and use the display named @var{display} to open
a8575fe5 190the initial Emacs frame. @xref{Display X}, for more details.
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191
192@item -nw
a8575fe5 193@opindex -nw
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194@itemx --no-window-system
195@opindex --no-window-system
a8575fe5 196@cindex disable window system
54e33bb3 197Don't communicate directly with the window system, disregarding the
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198@env{DISPLAY} environment variable even if it is set. This means that
199Emacs uses the terminal from which it was launched for all its display
200and input.
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201
202@need 3000
203@cindex batch mode
204@item -batch
a8575fe5 205@opindex --batch
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206@itemx --batch
207Run Emacs in @dfn{batch mode}, which means that the text being edited is
208not displayed and the standard terminal interrupt characters such as
209@kbd{C-z} and @kbd{C-c} continue to have their normal effect. Emacs in
1ba2ce68 210batch mode outputs to @code{stderr} only what would normally be displayed
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211in the echo area under program control, and functions which would
212normally read from the minibuffer take their input from @code{stdin}.
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213
214Batch mode is used for running programs written in Emacs Lisp from
215shell scripts, makefiles, and so on. Normally the @samp{-l} option
216or @samp{-f} option will be used as well, to invoke a Lisp program
217to do the batch processing.
218
0a41ca77 219@samp{--batch} implies @samp{-q} (do not load an init file). It also
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220causes Emacs to exit after processing all the command options. In
221addition, it disables auto-saving except in buffers for which it has
222been explicitly requested.
6bf7aab6 223
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224@item --script @var{file}
225@opindex --script
6b61353c 226@cindex script mode
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227Run Emacs in batch mode, like @samp{--batch}, and then read and
228execute the Lisp code in @var{file}.
229
230The normal use of this option is in executable script files that run
231Emacs. They can start with this text on the first line
232
233@example
234#!/usr/bin/emacs --script
235@end example
236
237@noindent
238which will invoke Emacs with @samp{--script} and supply the name of
239the script file as @var{file}. Emacs Lisp then treats @samp{#!} as a
240comment delimiter.
241
6bf7aab6 242@item -q
a8575fe5 243@opindex -q
6bf7aab6 244@itemx --no-init-file
a8575fe5 245@opindex --no-init-file
6b61353c 246@cindex bypassing init and @file{default.el} file
a8575fe5 247@cindex init file, not loading
3b703ce9 248@cindex @file{default.el} file, not loading
6bf7aab6 249Do not load your Emacs init file @file{~/.emacs}, or @file{default.el}
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250either. Regardless of this switch, @file{site-start.el} is still loaded.
251When invoked like this, Emacs does not allow saving options
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252changed with the @kbd{M-x customize} command and its variants.
253@xref{Easy Customization}.
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254
255@item --no-site-file
a8575fe5 256@opindex --no-site-file
3b703ce9 257@cindex @file{site-start.el} file, not loading
6bf7aab6 258Do not load @file{site-start.el}. The options @samp{-q}, @samp{-u}
6b61353c 259and @samp{--batch} have no effect on the loading of this file---this is
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260the only option that blocks it.
261
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262@item --no-splash
263@opindex --no-splash
908abdfd 264@vindex inhibit-startup-message
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265Do not display a splash screen on startup; this is equivalent to
266setting the variable @code{inhibit-startup-message} to non-@code{nil}.
908abdfd 267
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268@item --no-desktop
269@opindex --no-desktop
270Do not reload any saved desktop. @xref{Saving Emacs Sessions}.
271
6bf7aab6 272@item -u @var{user}
a8575fe5 273@opindex -u
6bf7aab6 274@itemx --user=@var{user}
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275@opindex --user
276@cindex load init file of another user
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277Load @var{user}'s Emacs init file @file{~@var{user}/.emacs} instead of
278your own.
279
280@item --debug-init
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281@opindex --debug-init
282@cindex errors in init file
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283Enable the Emacs Lisp debugger for errors in the init file.
284
285@item --unibyte
a8575fe5 286@opindex --unibyte
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287@itemx --no-multibyte
288@opindex --no-multibyte
56bfaffd 289@cindex unibyte operation, command-line argument
1a1b17bc 290Do almost everything with single-byte buffers and strings.
6bf7aab6 291All buffers and strings are unibyte unless you (or a Lisp program)
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292explicitly ask for a multibyte buffer or string. (Note that Emacs
293always loads Lisp files in multibyte mode, even if @samp{--unibyte} is
294specified; see @ref{Enabling Multibyte}.) Setting the environment
295variable @env{EMACS_UNIBYTE} has the same effect.
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296
297@item --multibyte
a8575fe5 298@opindex --multibyte
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299@itemx --no-unibyte
300@opindex --no-unibyte
60a96371 301Inhibit the effect of @env{EMACS_UNIBYTE}, so that Emacs
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302uses multibyte characters by default, as usual.
303@end table
304
305@node Command Example
306@appendixsec Command Argument Example
307
308 Here is an example of using Emacs with arguments and options. It
309assumes you have a Lisp program file called @file{hack-c.el} which, when
310loaded, performs some useful operation on the current buffer, expected
311to be a C program.
312
313@example
314emacs -batch foo.c -l hack-c -f save-buffer >& log
315@end example
316
317@noindent
318This says to visit @file{foo.c}, load @file{hack-c.el} (which makes
319changes in the visited file), save @file{foo.c} (note that
320@code{save-buffer} is the function that @kbd{C-x C-s} is bound to), and
6b61353c 321then exit back to the shell (because of @samp{--batch}). @samp{--batch}
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322also guarantees there will be no problem redirecting output to
323@file{log}, because Emacs will not assume that it has a display terminal
324to work with.
325
326@node Resume Arguments
327@appendixsec Resuming Emacs with Arguments
328
329 You can specify action arguments for Emacs when you resume it after
330a suspension. To prepare for this, put the following code in your
331@file{.emacs} file (@pxref{Hooks}):
332
515d3b4b 333@c `resume-suspend-hook' is correct. It is the name of a function.
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334@example
335(add-hook 'suspend-hook 'resume-suspend-hook)
336(add-hook 'suspend-resume-hook 'resume-process-args)
337@end example
338
339 As further preparation, you must execute the shell script
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340@file{emacs.csh} (if you use csh as your shell) or @file{emacs.bash}
341(if you use bash as your shell). These scripts define an alias named
6bf7aab6 342@code{edit}, which will resume Emacs giving it new command line
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343arguments such as files to visit. The scripts are found in the
344@file{etc} subdirectory of the Emacs distribution.
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345
346 Only action arguments work properly when you resume Emacs. Initial
347arguments are not recognized---it's too late to execute them anyway.
348
349 Note that resuming Emacs (with or without arguments) must be done from
350within the shell that is the parent of the Emacs job. This is why
351@code{edit} is an alias rather than a program or a shell script. It is
352not possible to implement a resumption command that could be run from
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353other subjobs of the shell; there is no way to define a command that could
354be made the value of @env{EDITOR}, for example. Therefore, this feature
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355does not take the place of the Emacs Server feature (@pxref{Emacs
356Server}).
357
358 The aliases use the Emacs Server feature if you appear to have a
359server Emacs running. However, they cannot determine this with complete
360accuracy. They may think that a server is still running when in
361actuality you have killed that Emacs, because the file
515d3b4b 362@file{/tmp/esrv@dots{}} still exists. If this happens, find that
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363file and delete it.
364
365@node Environment
366@appendixsec Environment Variables
367@cindex environment variables
368
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369 The @dfn{environment} is a feature of the operating system; it
370consists of a collection of variables with names and values. Each
371variable is called an @dfn{environment variable}; environment variable
372names are case-sensitive, and it is conventional to use upper case
373letters only. The values are all text strings.
6bf7aab6 374
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375 What makes the environment useful is that subprocesses inherit the
376environment automatically from their parent process. This means you
377can set up an environment variable in your login shell, and all the
378programs you run (including Emacs) will automatically see it.
379Subprocesses of Emacs (such as shells, compilers, and version-control
380software) inherit the environment from Emacs, too.
381
382@findex setenv
383@findex getenv
384 Inside Emacs, the command @kbd{M-x getenv} gets the value of an
385environment variable. @kbd{M-x setenv} sets a variable in the Emacs
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386environment. (Environment variable substitutions with @samp{$} work
387in the value just as in file names; see @ref{File Names with $}.)
388
389 The way to set environment variables outside of Emacs depends on the
390operating system, and especially the shell that you are using. For
391example, here's how to set the environment variable @env{ORGANIZATION}
392to @samp{not very much} using Bash:
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393
394@example
395export ORGANIZATION="not very much"
396@end example
397
398@noindent
399and here's how to do it in csh or tcsh:
400
401@example
402setenv ORGANIZATION "not very much"
403@end example
404
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405 When Emacs is using the X Window System, various environment
406variables that control X work for Emacs as well. See the X
407documentation for more information.
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408
409@menu
410* General Variables:: Environment variables that all versions of Emacs use.
411* Misc Variables:: Certain system-specific variables.
afcca90b 412* MS-Windows Registry:: An alternative to the environment on MS-Windows.
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413@end menu
414
415@node General Variables
416@appendixsubsec General Variables
417
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418 Here is an alphabetical list of specific environment variables that
419have special meanings in Emacs, giving the name of each variable and
420its meaning. Most of these variables are also used by some other
421programs. Emacs does not require any of these environment variables
422to be set, but it uses their values if they are set.
423
60a96371 424@table @env
f51e949c 425@item CDPATH
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426Used by the @code{cd} command to search for the directory you specify,
427when you specify a relative directory name.
6bf7aab6 428@item EMACS_UNIBYTE
56bfaffd 429@cindex unibyte operation, environment variable
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430Defining this environment variable with a nonempty value directs Emacs
431to do almost everything with single-byte buffers and strings. It is
432equivalent to using the @samp{--unibyte} command-line option on each
433invocation. @xref{Initial Options}.
6bf7aab6 434@item EMACSDATA
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435Directory for the architecture-independent files that come with Emacs.
436This is used to initialize the Lisp variable @code{data-directory}.
18a349f5 437@item EMACSDOC
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438Directory for the documentation string file,
439@file{DOC-@var{emacsversion}}. This is used to initialize the Lisp
b389557a 440variable @code{doc-directory}.
6bf7aab6 441@item EMACSLOADPATH
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442A colon-separated list of directories@footnote{
443Here and below, whenever we say ``colon-separated list of directories'',
444it pertains to Unix and GNU/Linux systems. On MS-DOS and MS-Windows,
445the directories are separated by semi-colons instead, since DOS/Windows
446file names might include a colon after a drive letter.}
447to search for Emacs Lisp files---used to initialize @code{load-path}.
6bf7aab6 448@item EMACSPATH
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449A colon-separated list of directories to search for executable
450files---used to initialize @code{exec-path}.
6bf7aab6 451@item ESHELL
60a96371 452Used for shell-mode to override the @env{SHELL} environment variable.
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453@item HISTFILE
454The name of the file that shell commands are saved in between logins.
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455This variable defaults to @file{~/.bash_history} if you use Bash, to
456@file{~/.sh_history} if you use ksh, and to @file{~/.history}
457otherwise.
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458@item HOME
459The location of the user's files in the directory tree; used for
460expansion of file names starting with a tilde (@file{~}). On MS-DOS, it
461defaults to the directory from which Emacs was started, with @samp{/bin}
71d0aa0c 462removed from the end if it was present. On Windows, the default value
afcca90b 463of @env{HOME} is @file{C:/}, the root directory of drive @file{C:}.
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464@item HOSTNAME
465The name of the machine that Emacs is running on.
177c0ea7 466@item INCPATH
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467A colon-separated list of directories. Used by the @code{complete} package
468to search for files.
469@item INFOPATH
b389557a 470A colon-separated list of directories in which to search for Info files.
fbc164de 471@item LC_ALL
9c6251b6 472@itemx LC_COLLATE
6bf7aab6 473@itemx LC_CTYPE
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474@itemx LC_MESSAGES
475@itemx LC_MONETARY
476@itemx LC_NUMERIC
477@itemx LC_TIME
fbc164de 478@itemx LANG
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479The user's preferred locale. The locale has six categories, specified
480by the environment variables @env{LC_COLLATE} for sorting,
481@env{LC_CTYPE} for character encoding, @env{LC_MESSAGES} for system
482messages, @env{LC_MONETARY} for monetary formats, @env{LC_NUMERIC} for
483numbers, and @env{LC_TIME} for dates and times. If one of these
484variables is not set, the category defaults to the value of the
485@env{LANG} environment variable, or to the default @samp{C} locale if
486@env{LANG} is not set. But if @env{LC_ALL} is specified, it overrides
487the settings of all the other locale environment variables.
488
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489On MS-Windows, if @env{LANG} is not already set in the environment
490when Emacs starts, Emacs sets it based on the system-wide default
491language, which you can set in the @samp{Regional Settings} Control Panel
492on some versions of MS-Windows.
493
494The value of the @env{LC_CTYPE} category is
4b1ad19a 495matched against entries in @code{locale-language-names},
fbc164de 496@code{locale-charset-language-names}, and
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497@code{locale-preferred-coding-systems}, to select a default language
498environment and coding system. @xref{Language Environments}.
6bf7aab6 499@item LOGNAME
60a96371 500The user's login name. See also @env{USER}.
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501@item MAIL
502The name of the user's system mail inbox.
6bf7aab6 503@item MH
4b1ad19a 504Name of setup file for the mh system. (The default is @file{~/.mh_profile}.)
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505@item NAME
506The real-world name of the user.
507@item NNTPSERVER
5937ea41 508The name of the news server. Used by the mh and Gnus packages.
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509@item ORGANIZATION
510The name of the organization to which you belong. Used for setting the
5937ea41 511`Organization:' header in your posts from the Gnus package.
6bf7aab6 512@item PATH
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513A colon-separated list of directories in which executables reside. This
514is used to initialize the Emacs Lisp variable @code{exec-path}.
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515@item PWD
516If set, this should be the default directory when Emacs was started.
517@item REPLYTO
518If set, this specifies an initial value for the variable
519@code{mail-default-reply-to}. @xref{Mail Headers}.
520@item SAVEDIR
521The name of a directory in which news articles are saved by default.
5937ea41 522Used by the Gnus package.
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523@item SHELL
524The name of an interpreter used to parse and execute programs run from
525inside Emacs.
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526@item SMTPSERVER
527The name of the outgoing mail server. Used by the SMTP library
333c5fc5 528(@pxref{Top,,Sending mail via SMTP,smtpmail}).
afcca90b 529@cindex background mode, on @command{xterm}
6bf7aab6 530@item TERM
0ec1f115 531The type of the terminal that Emacs is using. This variable must be
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532set unless Emacs is run in batch mode. On MS-DOS, it defaults to
533@samp{internal}, which specifies a built-in terminal emulation that
b370b3b0 534handles the machine's own display. If the value of @env{TERM} indicates
afcca90b 535that Emacs runs in non-windowed mode from @command{xterm} or a similar
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536terminal emulator, the background mode defaults to @samp{light}, and
537Emacs will choose colors that are appropriate for a light background.
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538@item TERMCAP
539The name of the termcap library file describing how to program the
60a96371 540terminal specified by the @env{TERM} variable. This defaults to
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541@file{/etc/termcap}.
542@item TMPDIR
543Used by the Emerge package as a prefix for temporary files.
544@item TZ
94c3309f 545This specifies the current time zone and possibly also daylight
afcca90b 546saving time information. On MS-DOS, if @env{TZ} is not set in the
94c3309f 547environment when Emacs starts, Emacs defines a default value as
9c3aede4 548appropriate for the country code returned by DOS. On MS-Windows, Emacs
afcca90b 549does not use @env{TZ} at all.
6bf7aab6 550@item USER
60a96371 551The user's login name. See also @env{LOGNAME}. On MS-DOS, this
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552defaults to @samp{root}.
553@item VERSION_CONTROL
554Used to initialize the @code{version-control} variable (@pxref{Backup
555Names}).
556@end table
557
558@node Misc Variables
559@appendixsubsec Miscellaneous Variables
560
561These variables are used only on particular configurations:
562
60a96371 563@table @env
6bf7aab6 564@item COMSPEC
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565On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, the name of the command interpreter to use
566when invoking batch files and commands internal to the shell. On MS-DOS
567this is also used to make a default value for the @env{SHELL} environment
568variable.
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569
570@item NAME
60a96371 571On MS-DOS, this variable defaults to the value of the @env{USER}
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572variable.
573
574@item TEMP
575@itemx TMP
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576On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, these specify the name of the directory for
577storing temporary files in.
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578
579@item EMACSTEST
580On MS-DOS, this specifies a file to use to log the operation of the
581internal terminal emulator. This feature is useful for submitting bug
582reports.
583
584@item EMACSCOLORS
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585On MS-DOS, this specifies the screen colors. It is useful to set them
586this way, since otherwise Emacs would display the default colors
587momentarily when it starts up.
588
589The value of this variable should be the two-character encoding of the
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590foreground (the first character) and the background (the second
591character) colors of the default face. Each character should be the
592hexadecimal code for the desired color on a standard PC text-mode
47d7776c 593display. For example, to get blue text on a light gray background,
ed50f966 594specify @samp{EMACSCOLORS=17}, since 1 is the code of the blue color and
47d7776c 5957 is the code of the light gray color.
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596
597The PC display usually supports only eight background colors. However,
598Emacs switches the DOS display to a mode where all 16 colors can be used
599for the background, so all four bits of the background color are
600actually used.
601
602@item WINDOW_GFX
603Used when initializing the Sun windows system.
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604
605@item PRELOAD_WINSOCK
606On MS-Windows, if you set this variable, Emacs will load and initialize
607the network library at startup, instead of waiting until the first
608time it is required.
609
610@item emacs_dir
611On MS-Windows, @env{emacs_dir} is a special environment variable, which
612indicates the full path of the directory in which Emacs is installed.
613If Emacs is installed in the standard directory structure, it
614calculates this value automatically. It is not much use setting this
615variable yourself unless your installation is non-standard, since
616unlike other environment variables, it will be overridden by Emacs at
617startup. When setting other environment variables, such as
618@env{EMACSLOADPATH}, you may find it useful to use @env{emacs_dir}
619rather than hard-coding an absolute path. This allows multiple
620versions of Emacs to share the same environment variable settings, and
621it allows you to move the Emacs installation directory, without
622changing any environment or registry settings.
6bf7aab6 623@end table
e428626a 624
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625@node MS-Windows Registry
626@appendixsubsec The MS-Windows System Registry
627@pindex addpm, MS-Windows installation program
628@cindex registry, setting environment variables and resources on MS-Windows
629
630On MS-Windows, the installation program @command{addpm.exe} adds values
631for @env{emacs_dir}, @env{EMACSLOADPATH}, @env{EMACSDATA},
632@env{EMACSPATH}, @env{EMACSDOC}, @env{SHELL} and @env{TERM} to the
633@file{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE} section of the system registry, under
634@file{/Software/GNU/Emacs}. It does this because there is no standard
635place to set environment variables across different versions of
636Windows. Running @command{addpm.exe} is no longer strictly
637necessary in recent versions of Emacs, but if you are upgrading from
638an older version, running @command{addpm.exe} ensures that you do not have
639older registry entries from a previous installation, which may not be
640compatible with the latest version of Emacs.
641
642When Emacs starts, as well as checking the environment, it also checks
643the System Registry for those variables and for @env{HOME}, @env{LANG}
644and @env{PRELOAD_WINSOCK}.
645
646To determine the value of those variables, Emacs goes through the
647following procedure. First, the environment is checked. If the
648variable is not found there, Emacs looks for registry keys by that
649name under @file{/Software/GNU/Emacs}; first in the
650@file{HKEY_CURRENT_USER} section of the registry, and if not found
651there, in the @file{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE} section. Finally, if Emacs
652still cannot determine the values, compiled-in defaults are used.
653
654In addition to the environment variables above, you can also add many
655of the settings which on X belong in the @file{.Xdefaults} file
656(@pxref{X Resources}) to the @file{/Software/GNU/Emacs} registry key.
657Settings you add to the @file{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE} section will affect
658all users of the machine. Settings you add to the
659@file{HKEY_CURRENT_USER} section will only affect you, and will
660override machine wide settings.
661
e428626a 662@node Display X
177c0ea7 663@appendixsec Specifying the Display Name
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664@cindex display name (X Window System)
665@cindex @env{DISPLAY} environment variable
666
667 The environment variable @env{DISPLAY} tells all X clients, including
668Emacs, where to display their windows. Its value is set by default
669in ordinary circumstances, when you start an X server and run jobs
670locally. Occasionally you may need to specify the display yourself; for
671example, if you do a remote login and want to run a client program
672remotely, displaying on your local screen.
673
674 With Emacs, the main reason people change the default display is to
675let them log into another system, run Emacs on that system, but have the
676window displayed at their local terminal. You might need to log in
677to another system because the files you want to edit are there, or
678because the Emacs executable file you want to run is there.
679
680 The syntax of the @env{DISPLAY} environment variable is
681@samp{@var{host}:@var{display}.@var{screen}}, where @var{host} is the
682host name of the X Window System server machine, @var{display} is an
683arbitrarily-assigned number that distinguishes your server (X terminal)
684from other servers on the same machine, and @var{screen} is a
685rarely-used field that allows an X server to control multiple terminal
686screens. The period and the @var{screen} field are optional. If
687included, @var{screen} is usually zero.
688
689 For example, if your host is named @samp{glasperle} and your server is
690the first (or perhaps the only) server listed in the configuration, your
691@env{DISPLAY} is @samp{glasperle:0.0}.
692
693 You can specify the display name explicitly when you run Emacs, either
694by changing the @env{DISPLAY} variable, or with the option @samp{-d
695@var{display}} or @samp{--display=@var{display}}. Here is an example:
696
697@smallexample
698emacs --display=glasperle:0 &
699@end smallexample
700
701 You can inhibit the direct use of the window system and GUI with the
6b61353c 702@samp{-nw} option. It tells Emacs to display using ordinary @acronym{ASCII} on
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703its controlling terminal. This is also an initial option.
704
705 Sometimes, security arrangements prevent a program on a remote system
706from displaying on your local system. In this case, trying to run Emacs
707produces messages like this:
708
709@smallexample
710Xlib: connection to "glasperle:0.0" refused by server
711@end smallexample
712
713@noindent
afcca90b 714You might be able to overcome this problem by using the @command{xhost}
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715command on the local system to give permission for access from your
716remote machine.
717
718@node Font X
719@appendixsec Font Specification Options
720@cindex font name (X Window System)
721
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722 By default, Emacs displays text in a twelve point Courier font (when
723using X). You can specify a different font on your command line
724through the option @samp{-fn @var{name}} (or @samp{--font}, which is
725an alias for @samp{-fn}).
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726
727@table @samp
728@item -fn @var{name}
729@opindex -fn
730@itemx --font=@var{name}
731@opindex --font
732@cindex specify default font from the command line
733Use font @var{name} as the default font.
734@end table
735
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736 Under X, each font has a long name which consists of fourteen words
737or numbers, separated by dashes. Some fonts also have shorter
738nicknames. For instance, @samp{9x15} is such a nickname. This font
739makes each character nine pixels wide and fifteen pixels high. You
740can use either kind of name. Case is insignificant in both kinds.
741You can use wildcard patterns for the font name; then Emacs lets X
742choose one of the fonts that match the pattern. The wildcard
743character @samp{*} matches any sequence of characters (including none)
744and @samp{?} matches any single character. However, matching is
745implementation-dependent, and can be inaccurate when wildcards match
746dashes in a long name. For reliable results, supply all 14 dashes and
747use wildcards only within a field. Here is an example, which happens
748to specify the font whose nickname is @samp{6x13}:
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749
750@smallexample
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751emacs -fn \
752 "-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-*-*-*-c-60-iso8859-1" &
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753@end smallexample
754
755@noindent
756You can also specify the font in your @file{.Xdefaults} file:
757
758@smallexample
759emacs.font: -misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-*-*-*-c-60-iso8859-1
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760@end smallexample
761
762 Note that if you use a wildcard pattern on the command line, you
763need to enclose it in single or double quotes, to prevent the shell
764from accidentally expanding it into a list of file names. On the
765other hand, you should not quote the name in the @file{.Xdefaults}
766file.
767
768The default font used by Emacs (under X) is:
769
770@smallexample
771-adobe-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1
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772@end smallexample
773
774 A long font name has the following form:
775
776@smallexample
777-@var{maker}-@var{family}-@var{weight}-@var{slant}-@var{widthtype}-@var{style}@dots{}
6b61353c 778@dots{}-@var{pixels}-@var{height}-@var{horiz}-@var{vert}-@var{spacing}-@var{width}-@var{registry}-@var{encoding}
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779@end smallexample
780
781@table @var
782@item maker
783This is the name of the font manufacturer.
784@item family
785This is the name of the font family---for example, @samp{courier}.
786@item weight
787This is normally @samp{bold}, @samp{medium} or @samp{light}. Other
788words may appear here in some font names.
789@item slant
790This is @samp{r} (roman), @samp{i} (italic), @samp{o} (oblique),
791@samp{ri} (reverse italic), or @samp{ot} (other).
792@item widthtype
793This is normally @samp{condensed}, @samp{extended}, @samp{semicondensed}
794or @samp{normal}. Other words may appear here in some font names.
795@item style
796This is an optional additional style name. Usually it is empty---most
797long font names have two hyphens in a row at this point.
798@item pixels
799This is the font height, in pixels.
800@item height
801This is the font height on the screen, measured in tenths of a printer's
802point---approximately 1/720 of an inch. In other words, it is the point
803size of the font, times ten. For a given vertical resolution,
804@var{height} and @var{pixels} are proportional; therefore, it is common
805to specify just one of them and use @samp{*} for the other.
806@item horiz
807This is the horizontal resolution, in pixels per inch, of the screen for
808which the font is intended.
809@item vert
810This is the vertical resolution, in pixels per inch, of the screen for
811which the font is intended. Normally the resolution of the fonts on
812your system is the right value for your screen; therefore, you normally
813specify @samp{*} for this and @var{horiz}.
814@item spacing
815This is @samp{m} (monospace), @samp{p} (proportional) or @samp{c}
816(character cell).
817@item width
818This is the average character width, in pixels, multiplied by ten.
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819@item registry
820@itemx encoding
821These together make up the X font character set that the font depicts.
822(X font character sets are not the same as Emacs charsets, but they
823are solutions for the same problem.) You can use the
824@command{xfontsel} program to check which choices you have. However,
825normally you should use @samp{iso8859} for @var{registry} and @samp{1}
826for @var{encoding}.
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827@end table
828
829@cindex listing system fonts
830 You will probably want to use a fixed-width default font---that is,
831a font in which all characters have the same width. Any font with
832@samp{m} or @samp{c} in the @var{spacing} field of the long name is a
afcca90b 833fixed-width font. Here's how to use the @command{xlsfonts} program to
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834list all the fixed-width fonts available on your system:
835
836@example
837xlsfonts -fn '*x*' | egrep "^[0-9]+x[0-9]+"
838xlsfonts -fn '*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-m*'
839xlsfonts -fn '*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-c*'
840@end example
841
842@noindent
afcca90b 843To see what a particular font looks like, use the @command{xfd} command.
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844For example:
845
846@example
847xfd -fn 6x13
848@end example
849
850@noindent
851displays the entire font @samp{6x13}.
852
853 While running Emacs, you can set the font of the current frame
854(@pxref{Frame Parameters}) or for a specific kind of text
855(@pxref{Faces}).
856
e15044ea 857@node Colors
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858@appendixsec Window Color Options
859@cindex color of window
860@cindex text colors, from command line
861
862@findex list-colors-display
863@cindex available colors
864 On a color display, you can specify which color to use for various
865parts of the Emacs display. To find out what colors are available on
866your system, type @kbd{M-x list-colors-display}, or press
867@kbd{C-Mouse-2} and select @samp{Display Colors} from the pop-up menu.
868If you do not specify colors, on windowed displays the default for the
869background is white and the default for all other colors is black. On a
870monochrome display, the foreground is black, the background is white,
871and the border is gray if the display supports that. On terminals, the
872background is usually black and the foreground is white.
873
874 Here is a list of the command-line options for specifying colors:
875
876@table @samp
877@item -fg @var{color}
878@opindex -fg
879@itemx --foreground-color=@var{color}
880@opindex --foreground-color
881@cindex foreground color, command-line argument
882Specify the foreground color. @var{color} should be a standard color
883name, or a numeric specification of the color's red, green, and blue
884components as in @samp{#4682B4} or @samp{RGB:46/82/B4}.
885@item -bg @var{color}
886@opindex -bg
887@itemx --background-color=@var{color}
888@opindex --background-color
889@cindex background color, command-line argument
890Specify the background color.
891@item -bd @var{color}
892@opindex -bd
893@itemx --border-color=@var{color}
894@opindex --border-color
895@cindex border color, command-line argument
896Specify the color of the border of the X window.
897@item -cr @var{color}
898@opindex -cr
899@itemx --cursor-color=@var{color}
900@opindex --cursor-color
901@cindex cursor color, command-line argument
902Specify the color of the Emacs cursor which indicates where point is.
903@item -ms @var{color}
904@opindex -ms
905@itemx --mouse-color=@var{color}
906@opindex --mouse-color
907@cindex mouse pointer color, command-line argument
908Specify the color for the mouse cursor when the mouse is in the Emacs window.
909@item -r
910@opindex -r
911@itemx -rv
912@opindex -rv
913@itemx --reverse-video
914@opindex --reverse-video
915@cindex reverse video, command-line argument
916Reverse video---swap the foreground and background colors.
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917@item --color=@var{mode}
918@opindex --color
919@cindex standard colors on a character terminal
920For a character terminal only, specify the mode of color support. The
921parameter @var{mode} can be one of the following:
922@table @samp
923@item never
924@itemx no
925Don't use colors even if the terminal's capabilities specify color
926support.
927@item default
928@itemx auto
929Same as when @option{--color} is not used at all: Emacs detects at
930startup whether the terminal supports colors, and if it does, turns on
931colored display.
932@item always
933@itemx yes
934@itemx ansi8
935Turn on the color support unconditionally, and use color commands
936specified by the ANSI escape sequences for the 8 standard colors.
937@item @var{num}
938Use color mode for @var{num} colors. If @var{num} is -1, turn off
939color support (equivalent to @samp{never}); if it is 0, use the
940default color support for this terminal (equivalent to @samp{auto});
941otherwise use an appropriate standard mode for @var{num} colors. If
942there is no mode that supports @var{num} colors, Emacs acts as if
943@var{num} were 0, i.e.@: it uses the terminal's default color support
944mode.
945@end table
946If @var{mode} is omitted, it defaults to @var{ansi8}.
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947@end table
948
949 For example, to use a coral mouse cursor and a slate blue text cursor,
950enter:
951
952@example
953emacs -ms coral -cr 'slate blue' &
954@end example
955
956 You can reverse the foreground and background colors through the
957@samp{-rv} option or with the X resource @samp{reverseVideo}.
958
959 The @samp{-fg}, @samp{-bg}, and @samp{-rv} options function on
960text-only terminals as well as on window systems.
961
962@node Window Size X
d7beb4c9 963@appendixsec Options for Window Size and Position
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964@cindex geometry of Emacs window
965@cindex position and size of Emacs frame
966@cindex width and height of Emacs frame
d7beb4c9 967@cindex specifying fullscreen for Emacs frame
e428626a 968
d7beb4c9 969 Here is a list of the command-line options for specifying size and
177c0ea7 970position of the initial Emacs frame:
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971
972@table @samp
973@item -g @var{width}x@var{height}@r{[@{}+-@r{@}}@var{xoffset}@r{@{}+-@r{@}}@var{yoffset}@r{]]}
974@opindex -g
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975@itemx --geometry=@var{width}x@var{height}@r{[@{}+-@r{@}}@var{xoffset}@r{@{}+-@r{@}}@var{yoffset}@r{]]}
976@opindex --geometry
977@cindex geometry, command-line argument
26f17e6a 978Specify the size @var{width} and @var{height} (measured in character
e428626a 979columns and lines), and positions @var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset}
26f17e6a 980(measured in pixels). This applies to all frames.
e428626a 981
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982@item -fs
983@opindex -fs
984@itemx --fullscreen
985@opindex --fullscreen
986@cindex fullscreen, command-line argument
987Specify that width and height shall be the size of the screen.
988
989@item -fh
990@opindex -fh
991@itemx --fullheight
992@opindex --fullheight
993@cindex fullheight, command-line argument
994Specify that the height shall be the height of the screen.
995
996@item -fw
997@opindex -fw
998@itemx --fullwidth
999@opindex --fullwidth
1000@cindex fullwidth, command-line argument
1001Specify that the width shall be the width of the screen.
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1002@end table
1003
d7beb4c9 1004
e428626a 1005@noindent
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1006In the @samp{--geometry} option, @code{@r{@{}+-@r{@}}} means either a plus
1007 sign or a minus sign. A plus
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1008sign before @var{xoffset} means it is the distance from the left side of
1009the screen; a minus sign means it counts from the right side. A plus
1010sign before @var{yoffset} means it is the distance from the top of the
1011screen, and a minus sign there indicates the distance from the bottom.
1012The values @var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset} may themselves be positive or
1013negative, but that doesn't change their meaning, only their direction.
1014
afcca90b 1015 Emacs uses the same units as @command{xterm} does to interpret the geometry.
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1016The @var{width} and @var{height} are measured in characters, so a large font
1017creates a larger frame than a small font. (If you specify a proportional
1018font, Emacs uses its maximum bounds width as the width unit.) The
1019@var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset} are measured in pixels.
1020
e428626a 1021 You do not have to specify all of the fields in the geometry
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1022specification. If you omit both @var{xoffset} and @var{yoffset}, the
1023window manager decides where to put the Emacs frame, possibly by
1024letting you place it with the mouse. For example, @samp{164x55}
1025specifies a window 164 columns wide, enough for two ordinary width
1026windows side by side, and 55 lines tall.
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1027
1028 The default width for Emacs is 80 characters and the default height is
102940 lines. You can omit either the width or the height or both. If
1030you start the geometry with an integer, Emacs interprets it as the
1031width. If you start with an @samp{x} followed by an integer, Emacs
1032interprets it as the height. Thus, @samp{81} specifies just the width;
1033@samp{x45} specifies just the height.
1034
1035 If you start with @samp{+} or @samp{-}, that introduces an offset,
1036which means both sizes are omitted. Thus, @samp{-3} specifies the
1037@var{xoffset} only. (If you give just one offset, it is always
1038@var{xoffset}.) @samp{+3-3} specifies both the @var{xoffset} and the
1039@var{yoffset}, placing the frame near the bottom left of the screen.
1040
1041 You can specify a default for any or all of the fields in
1042@file{.Xdefaults} file, and then override selected fields with a
1043@samp{--geometry} option.
1044
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1045 Since the mode line and the echo area occupy the last 2 lines of the
1046frame, the height of the initial text window is 2 less than the height
1047specified in your geometry. In non-X-toolkit versions of Emacs, the
1048menu bar also takes one line of the specified number. But in the X
1049toolkit version, the menu bar is additional and does not count against
1050the specified height. The tool bar, if present, is also additional.
d7beb4c9 1051
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1052 Enabling or disabling the menu bar or tool bar alters the amount of
1053space available for ordinary text. Therefore, if Emacs starts up with
1054a tool bar (which is the default), and handles the geometry
1055specification assuming there is a tool bar, and then your
1056@file{~/.emacs} file disables the tool bar, you will end up with a
1057frame geometry different from what you asked for. To get the intended
1058size with no tool bar, use an X resource to specify ``no tool bar''
6b61353c 1059(@pxref{Table of Resources}); then Emacs will already know there's no
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1060tool bar when it processes the specified geometry.
1061
1062 When using one of @samp{--fullscreen}, @samp{--fullwidth} or
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1063@samp{--fullheight} there may be some space around the frame
1064anyway. That is because Emacs rounds the sizes so they are an
1065even number of character heights and widths.
1066
1067 Some window managers have options that can make them ignore both
1068program-specified and user-specified positions (sawfish is one).
1069If these are set, Emacs fails to position the window correctly.
1070
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1071@node Borders X
1072@appendixsec Internal and External Borders
1073@cindex borders (X Window System)
1074
1075 An Emacs frame has an internal border and an external border. The
1076internal border is an extra strip of the background color around the
1077text portion of the frame. Emacs itself draws the internal border.
1078The external border is added by the window manager outside the frame;
1079depending on the window manager you use, it may contain various boxes
1080you can click on to move or iconify the window.
1081
1082@table @samp
1083@item -ib @var{width}
1084@opindex -ib
1085@itemx --internal-border=@var{width}
1086@opindex --internal-border
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1087@cindex internal border width, command-line argument
1088Specify @var{width} as the width of the internal border (between the text
1089and the main border), in pixels.
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1090
1091@item -bw @var{width}
1092@opindex -bw
1093@itemx --border-width=@var{width}
1094@opindex --border-width
6b61353c 1095@cindex main border width, command-line argument
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1096Specify @var{width} as the width of the main border, in pixels.
1097@end table
1098
1099 When you specify the size of the frame, that does not count the
1100borders. The frame's position is measured from the outside edge of the
1101external border.
1102
1103 Use the @samp{-ib @var{n}} option to specify an internal border
1104@var{n} pixels wide. The default is 1. Use @samp{-bw @var{n}} to
1105specify the width of the external border (though the window manager may
1106not pay attention to what you specify). The default width of the
1107external border is 2.
1108
1109@node Title X
1110@appendixsec Frame Titles
1111
1112 An Emacs frame may or may not have a specified title. The frame
1113title, if specified, appears in window decorations and icons as the
1114name of the frame. If an Emacs frame has no specified title, the
1115default title has the form @samp{@var{invocation-name}@@@var{machine}}
1116(if there is only one frame) or the selected window's buffer name (if
1117there is more than one frame).
1118
1119 You can specify a title for the initial Emacs frame with a command
1120line option:
1121
1122@table @samp
6b61353c 1123@item -T @var{title}
e428626a 1124@opindex -T
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1125@itemx --title=@var{title}
1126@opindex --title
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1127@cindex frame title, command-line argument
1128Specify @var{title} as the title for the initial Emacs frame.
1129@end table
1130
186e9bcc 1131 The @samp{--name} option (@pxref{Resources}) also specifies the title
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1132for the initial Emacs frame.
1133
1134@node Icons X
1135@appendixsec Icons
1136@cindex icons (X Window System)
1137
1138 Most window managers allow the user to ``iconify'' a frame, removing
1139it from sight, and leaving a small, distinctive ``icon'' window in its
1140place. Clicking on the icon window makes the frame itself appear again.
1141If you have many clients running at once, you can avoid cluttering up
1142the screen by iconifying most of the clients.
1143
1144@table @samp
1145@item -i
1146@opindex -i
1147@itemx --icon-type
1148@opindex --icon-type
1149@cindex Emacs icon, a gnu
1150Use a picture of a gnu as the Emacs icon.
1151
1152@item -iconic
1153@opindex --iconic
1154@itemx --iconic
1155@cindex start iconified, command-line argument
1156Start Emacs in iconified state.
1157@end table
1158
1159 The @samp{-i} or @samp{--icon-type} option tells Emacs to use an icon
1160window containing a picture of the GNU gnu. If omitted, Emacs lets the
1161window manager choose what sort of icon to use---usually just a small
1162rectangle containing the frame's title.
1163
1164 The @samp{-iconic} option tells Emacs to begin running as an icon,
1165rather than showing a frame right away. In this situation, the icon
1166is the only indication that Emacs has started; the text frame doesn't
1167appear until you deiconify it.
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1168
1169@node Misc X
1170@appendixsec Other Display Options
1171
1172@table @samp
1173@item -hb
1174@opindex -hb
1175@itemx --horizontal-scroll-bars
1176@opindex --horizontal-scroll-bars
1177@cindex horizontal scroll bars, command-line argument
1178Enable horizontal scroll bars.
1179
1180@item -vb
1181@opindex -vb
1182@itemx --vertical-scroll-bars
1183@opindex --vertical-scroll-bars
1184@cindex vertical scroll bars, command-line argument
1185Enable vertical scroll bars.
1186
1187@item -lsp @var{pixels}
1188@opindex -lsp
1189@itemx --line-spacing=@var{pixels}
1190@opindex --line-spacing
1191@cindex line spacing, command-line argument
1192Specify @var{pixels} as additional space to put between lines, in pixels.
1193@end table
1194
1195 The @samp{--xrm} option (@pxref{Resources}) specifies additional
1196X resource values.
1197
1198@ignore
1199 arch-tag: fffecd9e-7329-4a51-a3cc-dd4a9889340e
1200@end ignore