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These variables are used only on particular configurations:
COMSPEC On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, the name of the command
interpreter to use when invoking batch files and commands
internal to the shell. On MS-DOS this is also used to make a
default value for the SHELL environment
variable.
NAME On MS-DOS, this variable defaults to the value of the
USER variable.
EMACSTEST On MS-DOS, this specifies a file to use to log the operation of the internal terminal emulator. This feature is useful for submitting bug reports.
EMACSCOLORS On MS-DOS, this specifies the screen colors. It is useful to set them this way, since otherwise Emacs would display the default colors momentarily when it starts up.
The value of this variable should be the two-character encoding of the foreground (the first character) and the background (the second character) colors of the default face. Each character should be the hexadecimal code for the desired color on a standard PC text-mode display. For example, to get blue text on a light gray background, specify ‘EMACSCOLORS=17’, since 1 is the code of the blue color and 7 is the code of the light gray color.
The PC display usually supports only eight background colors. However, Emacs switches the DOS display to a mode where all 16 colors can be used for the background, so all four bits of the background color are actually used.
PRELOAD_WINSOCK On MS-Windows, if you set this variable, Emacs will load and initialize the network library at startup, instead of waiting until the first time it is required.
emacs_dir On MS-Windows, emacs_dir is a special
environment variable, which indicates the full path of the
directory in which Emacs is installed. If Emacs is installed
in the standard directory structure, it calculates this value
automatically. It is not much use setting this variable
yourself unless your installation is non-standard, since
unlike other environment variables, it will be overridden by
Emacs at startup. When setting other environment variables,
such as EMACSLOADPATH, you may find it useful to
use emacs_dir rather than hard-coding an
absolute path. This allows multiple versions of Emacs to
share the same environment variable settings, and it allows
you to move the Emacs installation directory, without
changing any environment or registry settings.
Next: MS-Windows Registry, Previous: General Variables, Up: Environment [Contents][Index]