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The Windows equivalent of HOME is the
user-specific application data directory. The actual
location depends on the Windows version; typical values are
C:\Documents and Settings\username\Application
Data on Windows 2000/XP/2K3,
C:\Users\username\AppData\Roaming on
Windows Vista/7/2008, and either C:\WINDOWS\Application
Data or
C:\WINDOWS\Profiles\username\Application
Data on Windows 9X/ME. If this directory does not exist or
cannot be accessed, Emacs falls back to C:\ as the
default value of HOME.
You can override this default value of HOME by
explicitly setting the environment variable HOME to
point to any directory on your system. HOME can be
set either from the command shell prompt or from
‘Properties’ dialog of ‘My
Computer’. HOME can also be set in the
system registry, see MS-Windows
Registry.
For compatibility with older versions of Emacs23, if there is a file
named .emacs in C:\, the root directory
of drive C:, and HOME is set neither in
the environment nor in the Registry, Emacs will treat
C:\ as the default HOME location, and
will not look in the application data directory, even if it
exists. Note that only .emacs is looked for in
C:\; the older name _emacs (see below)
is not. This use of C:\.emacs to define
HOME is deprecated.
Whatever the final place is, Emacs sets the internal value of
the HOME environment variable to point to it, and it
will use that location for other files and directories it
normally looks for or creates in your home directory.
You can always find out what Emacs thinks is your home directory’s location by typing C-x d ~/ RET. This should present the list of files in the home directory, and show its full name on the first line. Likewise, to visit your init file, type C-x C-f ~/.emacs RET (assuming the file’s name is .emacs).
The home directory is where your init file is stored. It can have any name mentioned in Init File.
Because MS-DOS does not allow file names with leading dots, and older Windows systems made it hard to create files with such names, the Windows port of Emacs supports an init file name _emacs, if such a file exists in the home directory and .emacs does not. This name is considered obsolete.
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