At 10:16 AM 8/16/00 -0700, you wrote:
>  Is there such thing as /usr/bin/bash.exe on your machine??
>If not, here's the quick solution:
>set your shell to something reasonable, like
>c:/emacs/bin/cmdproxy.exe

No, this is not necessary, if the user wants to use bash. (I use bash).

The problem is not that the user is using bash. The problem is that bash
cannot find javac. The correct solution is to make sure bash is included in
the Windows command path, which is inherited by Emacs and thus bash.

- Paul

>  To do that, add something like this in your
>emacs file
>(setq shell-file-name "C:/EMACS/bin/cmdproxy.exe")  (or wherever  your
>emacs is)
>
>Question is -- how did your shell got set to /usr/bin/bash in a first
>place. One of 3 possibilities
>  It could be a line in your .emacs file (shell-file-name)
>  It could be environment variable in your autoexec.bat (SHELL or COMSPEC)
>  Or it could be a registry entry HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Gnu/Emacs
>                or in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/Software/Gnu/Emacs
>
>home this helps
>Yaroslav 
> 
>Type \C-h v to get the value o
>
>On Wed, 16 Aug 2000, Arafat Mohamed wrote:
>
>> I just got done installing JDE, and I thought I followed all the
>> instructions, so imaging my surprise when I go to the JDE pulldown, click on
>> compile and get the following err message.
>> 
>> cd d:/Java/PaintBox/
>> javac  PaintBox.java
>> /usr/bin/bash.exe: javac: command not found
>> 
>> Compilation exited abnormally with code 127 at Wed Aug 16 10:20:33
>> 
>> Someone please help me. What am I doing wrong?
>> 
>> I am running the latest NTEmacs, speedbar, bovinator, JDK, and JDE on Win98.
>> 
>> Thanks in advance,
>> Arafat Mohamed
>> 
>> 

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