<pclass="rvps2"><spanclass="rvts6">DxWnd accepts a few command line arguments. You can use none, any, or all of them to alter the program's behavior:</span></p>
<tdwidth="1380"style="border-color: #000000; border-style: solid; padding: 1px;"><pclass="rvps2"><spanclass="rvts6">Starts DxWnd iconized in the System Tray (see </span><aclass="rvts14"href="DxWndintheSystemTray.html">DxWnd in the System Tray</a><spanclass="rvts6">).</span></p>
<tdwidth="1380"style="border-color: #000000; border-style: solid; padding: 1px;"><pclass="rvps2"><spanclass="rvts6">Starts DxWnd initially in the IDLE state, so that it doesn't affect the programs until you manually issue a </span><spanclass="rvts16">Hook > Start</span><spanclass="rvts6"> command.</span></p>
<tdwidth="1380"style="border-color: #000000; border-style: solid; padding: 1px;"><pclass="rvps2"><spanclass="rvts6">Uses the </span><spanclass="rvts18"><filename></span><spanclass="rvts6"> configuration file instead of the default config.ini file. In any case, the configuration file must be located in DxWnd's working directory.</span></p>
<tdwidth="1380"style="border-color: #000000; border-style: solid; padding: 1px;"><pclass="rvps2"><spanclass="rvts6">If you need a localized version of DxWnd, this argument causes DxWnd to load all resource text from the external DLLs, given in </span><spanclass="rvts15">Resources_<xx>.dll</span><spanclass="rvts6">.</span></p>