- jalview.jvmmempc=50</pre> In Windows and in macOS you can then launch Jalview by
- double clicking on this file, and your memory setting will be used
- instead of the default value. <br /> <br /> In Linux or other
- unix variants you can launch Jalview on the command line and
- provide your JVL file as an argument with <pre>
- /PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl</pre> If you want to use a memory setting like this and open a
- file you can use both the jvl and alignment files as command line
- arguments, but you must put the <em>jvl</em> file first, e.g. <pre>
- /PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl /path/to/alignments/myalignment.fa</pre> Alternatively, you can use the standard Jalview command line
+ jalview.jvmmempc=50</pre> In Windows and in macOS you can then launch
+ Jalview by double clicking on this file, and your memory setting
+ will be used instead of the default value. <br /> <br /> In
+ Linux or other unix variants you can launch Jalview on the command
+ line and provide your JVL file as an argument with <pre>
+ /PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl</pre> If you
+ want to use a memory setting like this and open a file you can use
+ both the jvl and alignment files as command line arguments, but
+ you must put the <em>jvl</em> file first, e.g. <pre>
+ /PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl /path/to/alignments/myalignment.fa</pre>
+ Alternatively, you can use the standard Jalview command line