19

I installed emacs 23.3.1 in c:/emacs-23.3. Following the hints in this page, I updated the site-start.el to set HOME environment variable.

(setenv "HOME" "c:/users/USER/emacs")

And I made c:/users/USER/.emacs (like I did in unix/mac) to write the code for using slime, but it doesn't seem to start slime correctly.

Is this a correct way of setting emacs in Windows 7? Where do I put the .emacs file?

8 Answers 8

25

You need to set HOME in environment variables in Computer settings (if I remember correctly), or put init file to default directory (just start Emacs, and press C-x C-f ~/ to see what is actual directory). And as I remember, on Windows, init file could be called _emacs...

3
  • I've caught pieces of discussion re: _emacs. I've decided to go with renaming from cmd prompt, while in directory, ren _emacs .emacs. Nov 25, 2013 at 6:31
  • 6
    Changing the HOME variable will potentially influence all other applications installed, so this does not seem to be a good solution.
    – BartoszKP
    Aug 27, 2014 at 10:54
  • 1
    As far as I know, there was no pre-existing HOME variable. I just did this a few days ago, and it seems to be okay. Aug 28, 2014 at 20:22
15

I am running emacs as a portable app and this works very well for me:

Create a batch file in the root of your emacs directory. For example, I created:

C:\Dropbox\PortableApps\emacs-24.3\run_emacs_portable.bat

Then, edit the file and put this text into it:

set HOME=.\
bin\runemacs.exe %*

Now, I just launch emacs via the run_emacs_portable.bat file and my HOME folder always points to my emacs installation folder.

The %* allows you to pass arguments to the .bat file and have them forwarded to the runemacs.exe

4
  • 2
    You should add %* after runemacs.exe to forward arguments and be able to Open With portable Emacs.
    – user
    Apr 17, 2014 at 22:46
  • Thanks, I added in your suggestion! Great idea.
    – Matt Klein
    Apr 18, 2014 at 6:15
  • I was thinking about making a .bat file that would add HOME=.\ to the system, so I could just use the standard .exe on all my systems, after executing the .bat. I've tried setx -m, but it doesns't seem to work very well. Do you have any clue how I might get it to work? Nov 4, 2016 at 16:48
  • 1
    @EivindDahl When the .bat file runs set HOME=.\ it is changing the environment variable for that shell instance only. If you double-click the batch file, then a new shell (cmd.exe) is run, it's HOME value is changed, and then the shell is shut down. That is why this solution has the call set HOME=.\ take place in the same .bat file as the call to runemacs.exe. When runemacs.exe is executed from within the .bat file, the value of HOME for the running shell is .\ .
    – Matt Klein
    Nov 7, 2016 at 13:36
1

Inside the home directory .emacs.d is created automatically, and you can make init.el as a startup file. Also refer to this question.

1

To setup Emacs home folder in your Windows User folder (C:\Users\User\.emacs.d) just add this code to your current init file and restart Emacs.

(when (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
  (unless (getenv "Home")
    (shell-command (format "setx \"%s\" \"%s\"" 'Home (getenv "UserProfile")))))
1

I liked Роман Захаров's answer which seems good for maintaining a cross-platform configuration, but it didn't work.

This is what finally worked for me.

(when (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
  (setenv "Home" (getenv "UserProfile")))
0

you can start emacs, type M-x pwd and that will show you where you are in the Windows file tree. You can put your .emacs there.

0

On Windows, Emacs is started with some Properties defined, found when you right-click the executable on your windows system. There you can define the

  1. execution-directory, e.g. "C:\Users\loggedin_user\" (in parantheses)

  2. where emacs executes

  3. and looks for the .xemacs (.emacs) directory, where it find its init.el.

  4. And where you can define the startup instructions (like (setenv "HOME" "c:/Users/Username/") ) etc.

If you configure that, the next time, emacs starts from the directory, you defined, with the initialisation-file

0

If you want to use c:/users/USER/.emacs, you should have set your HOME variable to c:/users/USER, not c:/users/USER/emacs.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.