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You can specify the parameters for the initial startup frame
by setting initial-frame-alist in your init file
(see Init File).
This variable’s value is an alist of parameter values used when creating the initial frame. You can set this variable to specify the appearance of the initial frame without altering subsequent frames. Each element has the form:
(parameter . value)
Emacs creates the initial frame before it reads your init
file. After reading that file, Emacs checks
initial-frame-alist, and applies the parameter
settings in the altered value to the already created initial
frame.
If these settings affect the frame geometry and appearance, you’ll see the frame appear with the wrong ones and then change to the specified ones. If that bothers you, you can specify the same geometry and appearance with X resources; those do take effect before the frame is created. See X Resources in The GNU Emacs Manual.
X resource settings typically apply to all frames. If you
want to specify some X resources solely for the sake of the
initial frame, and you don’t want them to apply to
subsequent frames, here’s how to achieve this. Specify
parameters in default-frame-alist to override
the X resources for subsequent frames; then, to prevent these
from affecting the initial frame, specify the same parameters
in initial-frame-alist with values that match
the X resources.
If these parameters include (minibuffer . nil),
that indicates that the initial frame should have no minibuffer.
In this case, Emacs creates a separate minibuffer-only
frame as well.
This variable’s value is an alist of parameter
values used when creating an initial minibuffer-only frame
(i.e., the minibuffer-only frame that Emacs creates if
initial-frame-alist specifies a frame with no
minibuffer).
This is an alist specifying default values of frame parameters for all Emacs frames—the first frame, and subsequent frames. When using the X Window System, you can get the same results by means of X resources in many cases.
Setting this variable does not affect existing frames. Furthermore, functions that display a buffer in a separate frame may override the default parameters by supplying their own parameters.
If you invoke Emacs with command-line options that specify
frame appearance, those options take effect by adding elements to
either initial-frame-alist or
default-frame-alist. Options which affect just the
initial frame, such as ‘--geometry’ and
‘--maximized’, add to
initial-frame-alist; the others add to
default-frame-alist. see
Command Line Arguments for Emacs Invocation in The GNU
Emacs Manual.
Next: Window Frame Parameters, Previous: Parameter Access, Up: Frame Parameters [Contents][Index]