Found this thread, I find the answer from jens unacceptable. We're not asking to be told not to do it. I didn't like the other answers either there was always some quirk, like settings not used or an extra command line window popping up. I Did some digging and this works for me. No extra command line box for nothing and it uses my proper gvim settings.
alias gvim='HOME=/cygdrive/p/ cygstart /cygdrive/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/Vim/vim74/gvim.exe'
You simply need to alter the HOME to your own. To find out what to put there run gvim from windows then put in ":echo $HOME" and hit enter in my case it shows P:\ so that translates to /cygdrive/p/
Also if your gvim.exe is in a different directory/version you'll need to adjust.
Now when I type 'gvim script.sh' at a cygwin command prompt it launches gvim with the file, all nice and neat!
UPDATE
I found a slightly better way to do this. Using the alias was tying up my session that I ran the gvim from, I wanted it to launch as a separate process, using "gvim &" is inelegant as it lists job number when launching and displays a "done" line when completed. I'm too fussy so I figured out how to get that all tidy by using a function.
Just add this to your .bash_functions file, it builds on the previous section regarding home directory and backslash use.
gvim() {
ORIGHOME=$HOME
HOME=/cygdrive/p/
/cygdrive/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/Vim/vim74/gvim.exe $1 & disown
HOME=$ORIGHOME
} 2>/dev/null
UPDATE 2 for babun users!
Ok since having wrestled with this originally I have ended up scrapping the original cygwin install in favor of babun which seems to be a less troublesome setup for those wanting linux functionality in windows without a full blown virtual. Of course my gvim launch script broke, and I had to do the following in my .zshrc file (babun uses zsh, at first I resisted and switched it to bash but then relented as I figured they must have reason, and they did, I like it)
gvim() {
OLD_HOME=$HOME
OLD_VIMRUNTIME=$VIMRUNTIME
export HOME=/cygdrive/c/Users/gmitchell/
export VIMRUNTIME="C:\Program Files (x86)\VIM\vim74"
TARGET=$(cygpath -w $1)
(/cygdrive/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/Vim/vim74/gvim.exe $TARGET &)
export HOME=$OLD_HOME
export VIMRUNTIME=$OLD_VIMRUNTIME
}
*Note: the surrounding curved braces ( ) stops the job id from messing up your clean shell, and you no longer need the "disown"
P.S. The only remaining annoyance with this now is that you cannot "exit" the babun shell until all gvim instances you've launched are closed. Maybe someone can figure that own out. I've tried. When you type exit it just hangs there until you've exited all gvims.