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I've recently shifted back to Windows 7 and am trying to use Renderman's shader compiler. It requires that RMANTREE be set to

C:\Program Files\Pixar]RendermanStudio-3.0.3-maya2012\rmantree

So I had set up my mac terminal to have that as an environment variable and never needed to set it again.

On Windows, I can get it to set RMANTREE but I have to do it in every command prompt. I tried adding it to the system environment variables but if I were then to

echo %RMANTREE%, I only get %RMANTREE% back instead of the correct path.

Probably a stupid question, but any ideas? It would just save a little bit of time, but even a little bit is awesome.

Jin
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2 Answers2

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You need to set a persistent User or System-wide environment variable.

To set the variable permanently for your user, use setx from a command prompt:

setx RMANTREE "C:\Program Files\Pixar]RendermanStudio-3.0.3-maya2012\rmantree"

To set the variable permanently for the entire system, add the /m switch:

setx /m RMANTREE "C:\Program Files\Pixar]RendermanStudio-3.0.3-maya2012\rmantree"

You can check if a specific environment variable is sourced by using the set (no "x"):

set RMANTREE

Or check all variables starting with a given letter:

set R

And no, it's not a stupid question.

edit: The change to the variable will show in all future CMD windows; NOT in the current CMD window.

treehead
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Setting it in System Environment Variables should give you the behaviour you are after.

Make sure you start a new command prompt once set up.

Paul
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