Hi On Thursday, 28 October, 2004, at 6:21:28 AM, Alexander S. Kunz wrote:
> Its the "path" to executable files (and such - goes for batch files > etc. as well). If you have added a directory-path to the system's > "PATH" environment variable, that directory will be searched for > commands if you enter them without specifying a directory. > I see you're using WinXP - right click on My Computer, Properties, > select the Advanced Tab, on the bottom is a button that leads you to > the Environment variables. When you locate the "PATH" variable, you > can add additional entries to it - separate multiple entries with a > semicolon (;). > [for example, I have my mp3 encoder (lame.exe) in "D:\SFX\MP3\lame" - > I have added that path to the "PATH" environment variable, this allows > me to use lame.exe from a command prompt without adding the path to > the executable file, so instead of having to type d:\sfx\mp3\lame\lame > I can simply type "lame" ...] Thanks. -- Best regards, MFPA mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Using The Bat! v2.12.00 on Windows XP 5.1 Build 2600 Service Pack 1 ________________________________________________ Current version is 3.0.1.33 | 'Using TBUDL' information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

