You can create a shourtcut to emacs somewhere and edit the command of that
shotcut to include the options you want in the command, in this case the
"-q" flag.

--
Darlan
At Tue, 01 Feb 2011 13:46:10 -0800,
Markus Heller <helle...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Erik Iverson <er...@ccbr.umn.edu> writes:
> 
> > Markus Heller wrote:
> >> Tassilo Horn <tass...@member.fsf.org> writes:
> >>
> >>> Markus Heller <helle...@gmail.com> writes:
> >>>
> >>> Hi Markus,
> >>>
> >>>> M-x doesn't work anymore!!  The M key works, e.g. M-w still does what
> >>>> it's supposed to if a region is active, and I can use ESC x instead.
> >>> What does C-h k M-x say?
> >>
> >> For C-h k M-x, it doesn't say anything.
> >>
> >> For C-h k ESC-x, it says the following:
> >
> > <snip>
> >
> > You should start emacs with the -q flag and see if it still
> > happens.  Assuming M-x returns, comment out 1/2 of your .emacs
> > file and determine by binary search where the problem is.
> 
> That might be a stupid question, but how do I do this under Win 7?  I
> just double-click on runemacs.exe ...
> 
> Markus
> 
> 
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