RE: emacs not obeying .Xdefaults in debian

2000-07-11 Thread Larry Elmore
> From: Suresh Kumar.R [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > When I start emacs in a debian machine, it is not obeying .Xdefaults file > in the home directory. It takes the .Xdefaults file, if it is named as > .Xdefaults-fully.qualified.machine.name > > Whereas, in a Redhat linux machine, emacs obeys the p

Re: emacs not obeying .Xdefaults in debian

2000-07-11 Thread David Wright
Quoting Suresh Kumar.R ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > When I start emacs in a debian machine, it is not obeying .Xdefaults file > in the home directory. It takes the .Xdefaults file, if it is named as > .Xdefaults-fully.qualified.machine.name > > Whereas, in a Redhat linux machine, emacs obeys the plain

Re: emacs not obeying .Xdefaults in debian

2000-07-11 Thread Chanop Silpa-Anan
Once upon a time, I heard Suresh Kumar.R say > Hi, > > When I start emacs in a debian machine, it is not obeying .Xdefaults file > in the home directory. It takes the .Xdefaults file, if it is named as > .Xdefaults-fully.qualified.machine.name > > Whereas, in a Redhat linux machine, emacs obeys

emacs not obeying .Xdefaults in debian

2000-07-11 Thread Suresh Kumar.R
Hi, When I start emacs in a debian machine, it is not obeying .Xdefaults file in the home directory. It takes the .Xdefaults file, if it is named as .Xdefaults-fully.qualified.machine.name Whereas, in a Redhat linux machine, emacs obeys the plain .Xdefaults. Any solutions to use .Xdefaults only