On Wed, October 31, 2007 11:29, Benjamin Ducke wrote: > The start command does actually work to put gis.m in the background. > I changed init.bat to read:
I propose to do it in this (slightly modified) way: In init.bat: === rem Get LOCATION_NAME to use in prompt FOR /F "usebackq delims==" %%i IN (`g.gisenv "get=LOCATION_NAME"`) DO @set LOCATION_NAME=%%i cd %HOME% prompt GRASS %GRASS_VERSION% $C%LOCATION_NAME%$F:$P $G start "GRASS %GRASS_VERSION% Shell" cmd.exe /E:ON /F:ON /V:ON %WINGISBASE%\bin\gis.m.bat === where gis.m.bat simply contains: === @ start "GIS Manager" "%GRASS_WISH%" "%WINGISBASE%/etc/gm/gm.tcl" === This way we have a functioning gis.m.bat which one can also launch from the command line if grass was started with in text mode. Nice also to finally get rid of this empty and useless cmd.exe window we had before. Only thing which is a bit annoying: you have to close the two (cmd and gis.m) seperately (i.e. gis.m does not close when you type exit in cmd.exe). But that's minor in my eyes. One question I don't know how to solve, though: just as for other scripts a gis.m.bat is created during compilation, which contains: @"%GRASS_SH%" -c '"%GISBASE%/scripts/gis.m" %*' However, I think that gis.m should run independently of whether someone has installed a shell, so I'd rather replace this bat file by the one above. This would mean creating some form of exception for gis.m to the below entry in include/Make/Script.make: $(BIN)/$(PGM).bat: $(MODULE_TOPDIR)/scripts/windows_launch.bat^M sed -e "s#SCRIPT_NAME#$(PGM)#" $(MODULE_TOPDIR)/scripts/windows_launch.bat > $@ Is that possible ? Any other suggestions ? Moritz _______________________________________________ grass-dev mailing list grass-dev@grass.itc.it http://grass.itc.it/mailman/listinfo/grass-dev