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1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
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2 @c $Id: mh-e.texi,v 1.17 95/08/23 07:00:16 wohler Exp $
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3 @c %**start of header
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4 @setfilename ../info/mh-e
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5 @settitle mh-e
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6 @c %**end of header
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7
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8 @setchapternewpage odd
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9
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10 @dircategory Editors
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11 @direntry
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12 * MH-E: (mh-e). Emacs interface to the MH mail system.
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13 @end direntry
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14
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15 @c Version variables.
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16 @set EDITION 1.2
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17 @set VERSION 5.0.2
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18 @set UPDATED 22 August 1995
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19 @set UPDATE-MONTH August 1995
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20
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21 @ifinfo
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22 This is Edition @value{EDITION}, last updated @value{UPDATED}, of
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23 @cite{mh-e, The Emacs Interface to MH}, for mh-e, Version
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24 @value{VERSION}.
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25
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26 Copyright 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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27
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28 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim
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29 copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and
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30 this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
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31
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32 @ignore
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33 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX
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34 and print the results, provided the printed document
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35 carries a copying permission notice identical to this
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36 one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
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37 paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
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38
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39 @end ignore
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40 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified
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41 versions of this manual under the conditions for
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42 verbatim copying, provided also that the section
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43 entitled ``Copying''
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44 is included exactly as in the original, and provided
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45 that the entire resulting derived work is distributed
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46 under the terms of a permission notice identical to this
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47 one.
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48
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49 Permission is granted to copy and distribute
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50 translations of this manual into another language,
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51 under the above conditions for modified versions,
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52 except that this permission notice may be stated in a
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53 translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.
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54 @end ifinfo
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55
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56 @titlepage
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57 @sp 10
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58 @center @titlefont{mh-e}
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59 @sp 2
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60 @center The Emacs Interface to MH
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61 @sp 2
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62 @center by Bill Wohler
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63 @sp 2
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64 @center Edition @value{EDITION} for mh-e Version @value{VERSION}
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65 @sp 2
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66 @center @value{UPDATE-MONTH}
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67
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68 @page
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69 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
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70 Copyright @copyright{} 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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71
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72 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim
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73 copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and
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74 this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
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75
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76 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified
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77 versions of this manual under the conditions for
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78 verbatim copying, provided also that the section
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79 entitled ``The GNU General Public License''
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80 is included exactly as in the original, and provided
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81 that the entire resulting derived work is distributed
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82 under the terms of a permission notice identical to this
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83 one.
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84
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85 Permission is granted to copy and distribute
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86 translations of this manual into another language,
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87 under the above conditions for modified versions,
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88 except that this permission notice may be stated in a
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89 translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.
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90 @end titlepage
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91
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92 @ifinfo
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93 @node Top, Preface, (dir), (dir)
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94 @top MH and Emacs
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95 This is Edition @value{EDITION} of @cite{mh-e, The Emacs Interface to
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96 MH}, last updated @value{UPDATED} for mh-e Version @value{VERSION}.
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97
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98 @menu
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99 * Preface:: Introduction to mh-e.
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100 * Tour Through mh-e:: Use mh-e quickly!
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101 * Using mh-e:: Documentation for all commands.
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102 * Customizing mh-e:: Documentation for all variables.
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103 * Odds and Ends:: Getting mh-e, reporting bugs, mailing
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104 list and FAQ.
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105 * History:: The authors speak up!
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106 * Changes to mh-e:: Actual changes between Versions 3 and beyond.
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107 * Copying:: The GNU General Public License
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108 * Command Index::
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109 * Variable Index::
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110 * Concept Index::
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111 @end menu
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112 @end ifinfo
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113
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114 @node Preface, Tour Through mh-e, Top, Top
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115 @unnumbered Preface
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116
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117 @cindex Emacs
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118 @cindex Unix commands, Emacs
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119
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120 These chapters introduce another interface to MH that is accessible
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121 through the GNU Emacs editor, namely, @emph{mh-e}. mh-e is easy to use.
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122 I don't assume that you know GNU Emacs or even MH at this point, since I
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123 didn't know either of them when I discovered mh-e. However, mh-e was
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124 the tip of the iceberg, and I discovered more and more niceties about
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125 GNU Emacs and MH@. Now I'm fully hooked on both of them.
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126
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127 @cindex history
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128
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129 The mh-e package is distributed with GNU Emacs, @footnote{Note that mh-e
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130 is supported with MH 6 and either @w{Emacs 18} or @w{Emacs 19}.
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131 Reportedly, large parts of it work with @w{MH 5} and also with
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132 Lucid/XEmacs and Epoch, but there are no guarantees. It is also
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133 distributed with Lucid/XEmacs, as well as with MH itself.} so you shouldn't
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134 have to do anything special to use it. But it's important to note a
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135 brief history of mh-e. @w{Version 3} was prevalent through the @w{Emacs
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136 18} and early @w{Emacs 19} years. Then @w{Version 4} came out (@w{Emacs
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137 19.23}), which introduced several new and changed commands. Finally,
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138 @w{Version 5.0} was released, which fixed some bugs and
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139 incompatibilities. This is the version covered by this manual.
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140 @ref{Getting Started} will help you decide which version you
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141 have.
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142
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143 If you don't already use GNU Emacs but want to learn more, you can read
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144 an online tutorial by starting GNU Emacs and typing @kbd{C-h t}
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145 (@code{help-with-tutorial}). (This notation is described in
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146 @ref{Conventions}.) If you want to take the plunge, consult the
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147 @iftex
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148 @cite{GNU Emacs Manual},
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149 @end iftex
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150 @ifinfo
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151 @ref{top, , GNU Emacs Manual, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual},
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152 @end ifinfo
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153 from the Free Software Foundation.
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154
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155 If more information is needed, you can go to the Unix manual pages of
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156 the individual MH commands. When the name is not obvious, I'll guide
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157 you to a relevant MH manual page that describes the action more fully.
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158
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159 I hope you enjoy these chapters! If you have any comments, or
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160 suggestions for this document, please let me know.
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161
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162 @noindent
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163 Bill Wohler <@i{wohler@@newt.com}>@*
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164 8 February 1995
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165
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166 @node Tour Through mh-e, Using mh-e, Preface, Top
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167 @chapter Tour Through mh-e
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168
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169 This chapter introduces some of the terms you'll need to know and then
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170 takes you on a tour of mh-e. @footnote{The keys mentioned in these
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171 chapters refer to the default key bindings. If you've changed the
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172 bindings, refer to the command summaries at the beginning of each major
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173 section in @ref{Using mh-e}, for a mapping between default key bindings
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174 and function names.} When you're done, you'll be able to send, read,
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175 and file mail, which is all that a lot of people ever do. But if you're
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176 the curious type, you'll read @ref{Using mh-e} to be able to use all
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177 the features of mh-e. If you're the adventurous type, you'll read
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178 @ref{Customizing mh-e} to make mh-e do what you want. I suggest you
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179 read this chapter first to get the big picture, and then you can read
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180 the other two as you wish.
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181
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182 @menu
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183 * Conventions:: GNU Emacs Terms and Conventions
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184 * Getting Started::
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185 * Sending Mail Tour::
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186 * Reading Mail Tour::
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187 * Processing Mail Tour::
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188 * Leaving mh-e::
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189 * More About mh-e::
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190 @end menu
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191
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192 @node Conventions, Getting Started, Tour Through mh-e, Tour Through mh-e
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193 @section GNU Emacs Terms and Conventions
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194
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195 @cindex Emacs, terms and conventions
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196
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197 @cindex Emacs
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198 @cindex Unix commands, Emacs
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199
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200 If you're an experienced Emacs user, you can skip the following
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201 conventions and definition of terms and go directly to @ref{Getting
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202 Started} below. The conventions are as follows:
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203
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204 @table @kbd
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205 @item C-x
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206 Hold down the @key{CTRL} (Control) key and press the @kbd{x} key.
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207 @item M-x
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208 Hold down the @key{META} or @key{ALT} key and press the @kbd{x} key.
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209
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210 Since some keyboards don't have a @key{META} key, you can generate
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211 @kbd{M-x}, for example, by pressing @key{ESC} (Escape), @emph{releasing
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212 it}, @footnote{This is emphasized because pressing ESC twice or holding
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213 it down a second too long so that it repeats gives you an error message.}
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214 and then pressing the @kbd{x} key.
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215 @item RET
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216 Press the @key{RETURN} or @key{ENTER} key. This is normally used to
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217 complete a command.
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218 @item SPC
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219 Press the space bar.
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220 @item TAB
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221 Press the @key{TAB} key.
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222 @item DEL
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223 Press the @key{DELETE} key. This may also be a Backspace key, depending
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224 on your keyboard or Emacs configuration.
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225 @end table
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226
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227 @cindex Emacs, prefix argument
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228 @cindex prefix argument
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229
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230 A @dfn{prefix argument} allows you to pass an argument to any Emacs
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231 function. To pass an argument, type @kbd{C-u} before the Emacs command
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232 or keystroke. Numeric arguments can be passed as well. For example, to
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233 insert five f's, use @kbd{C-u 5 f}. There is a default of four when
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234 using @kbd{C-u}, and you can use multiple prefix arguments to provide
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235 arguments of powers of four. To continue our example, you could insert
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236 four f's with @kbd{C-u f}, 16 f's with @kbd{C-u C-u f}, 64 f's with
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237 @kbd{C-u C-u C-u f}, and so on. Numeric and valueless negative
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238 arguments can also be inserted with the @key{META} key. Examples
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239 include @kbd{M-5} to specify an argument of 5, or @kbd{M--} which
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240 specifies a negative argument with no particular value.
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241
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242 @sp 2
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243 @need 1000
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244 @center @strong{NOTE}
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245
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246 @quotation
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247 The prefix @kbd{C-u} or @kbd{M-} is not necessary in mh-e's MH-Folder
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248 modes (@pxref{Reading Mail Tour}). In these modes, simply enter the
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249 numerical argument before entering the command.
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250 @end quotation
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251
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252 @cindex point
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253 @cindex Emacs, point
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254 @cindex mark
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255 @cindex Emacs, mark
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256 @cindex region
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257 @cindex Emacs, region
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258
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259 There are several other terms that are used in Emacs that you should
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260 know. The @dfn{point} is where the cursor currently is. You can save
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261 your current place in the file by setting a @dfn{mark}. This operation
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262 is useful in several ways. The mark can be later used when defining a
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263 @dfn{region}, which is the text between the point and mark. Many
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264 commands operate on regions, such as those for deleting text or filling
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265 paragraphs. A mark can be set with @kbd{C-@@} (or @kbd{C-SPC}).
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266
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267 @cindex minibuffer
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268 @cindex Emacs, minibuffer
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269 @cindex file completion
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270 @cindex Emacs, file completion
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271
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272 The @dfn{minibuffer} is the bottom line of the Emacs window, where all
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273 prompting and multiple-character input is directed. If you are prompted
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274 for information in the minibuffer, such as a filename, Emacs can help
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275 you complete your answer if you type @key{SPC} or @key{TAB}. A second
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276 @key{SPC} or @key{TAB} will list all possibilities at that point. The
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277 minibuffer is also where you enter Emacs function names after typing
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278 @kbd{M-x}. For example, in the first paragraph, I mentioned that you
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279 could obtain help with @kbd{C-h t} (@code{help-with-tutorial}). What
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280 this means is that you can get a tutorial by typing either @kbd{C-h t}
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281 or @kbd{M-x help-with-tutorial}. In the latter case, you are prompted
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282 for @samp{help-with-tutorial} in the minibuffer after typing @kbd{M-x}.
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283
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284 @cindex interrupting
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285 @cindex Emacs, interrupting
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286 @cindex quitting
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287 @cindex Emacs, quitting
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288
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289 @i{In case of trouble:} Emacs can be interrupted at any time with
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290 @kbd{C-g}. For example, if you've started a command that requests that
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291 you enter something in the minibuffer, but then you change your mind,
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292 type @kbd{C-g} and you'll be back where you started. If you want to
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293 exit Emacs entirely, use @kbd{C-x C-c}.
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294
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295 @node Getting Started, Sending Mail Tour, Conventions, Tour Through mh-e
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296 @section Getting Started
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297
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298 Because there are many old versions of mh-e out there, it is important to
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299 know which version you have. I'll be talking about @w{Version 5} which
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300 is similar to @w{Version 4} and vastly different from @w{Version 3}.
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301
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302 First, enter @kbd{M-x load-library @key{RET} mh-e
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303 @key{RET}}. @footnote{You wouldn't ordinarily do this.} The message,
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304 @samp{Loading mh-e...done}, should be displayed in the minibuffer. If
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305 you get @samp{Cannot open load file: mh-e}, then your Emacs is very
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306 badly configured, or mh-e is missing. You may wish to have your system
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307 administrator install a new Emacs or at least the latest mh-e files.
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308
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309 Having loaded mh-e successfully, enter @kbd{M-x mh-version @key{RET}}.
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310 The version of mh-e should be displayed. Hopefully it says that you're
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311 running @w{Version @value{VERSION}} which is the latest version as of
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312 this printing. If instead Emacs beeps and says @samp{[No match]}, then
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313 you're running an old version of mh-e.
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314
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315 If these tests reveal a non-existent or old version of mh-e, please
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316 consider obtaining a new version. You can have your system
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317 administrator upgrade the system-wide version, or you can install your
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318 own personal version. It's really quite easy; instructions for getting
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319 and installing mh-e are in @ref{Getting mh-e}. In the meantime, see
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320 @ref{Changes to mh-e}, which compares the old and new names of commands,
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321 functions, variables, and buffers.
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322
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323 @cindex @code{install-mh}
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324 @cindex MH commands, @code{install-mh}
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325
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326 Also, older versions of mh-e assumed that you had already set up your MH
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327 environment. Newer versions set up a new MH environment for you by
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328 running @code{install-mh} and notifying you of this fact with the
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329 message in a temporary buffer:
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330
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331 @example
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332 I'm going to create the standard MH path for you.
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333 @end example
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334
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335 Therefore, if you've never run MH before and you're using an old version
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336 of mh-e, you need to run @code{install-mh} from the shell before you
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337 continue the tour. If you don't, you'll be greeted with the error
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338 message: @samp{Can't find MH profile}.
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339
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340 @cindex @file{.emacs}
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341 @cindex files, @file{.emacs}
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342
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343 If, during the tour described in this chapter, you see a message like:
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344 @samp{Searching for program: no such file or directory,
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345 /usr/local/bin/mhpath}, it means that the MH programs and files are kept
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346 in a nonstandard directory. In this case, simply add the following to
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347 @file{~/.emacs} and restart @code{emacs}.
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348
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349 @vindex @code{mh-progs}, example
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350 @vindex @code{mh-lib}, example
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351
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352 @c XXX Real example for really naive user?
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353 @example
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354 @group
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355 (setq mh-progs "@var{/path/to/MH/binary/directory/}")
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356 (setq mh-lib "@var{/path/to/MH/library/directory/}")
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357 @end group
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358 @end example
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359
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360 @cindex ~
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361
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362 The @samp{~} notation used by @file{~/.emacs} above represents your home
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363 directory. This is used by the @code{bash} and @code{csh} shells. If
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364 your shell does not support this feature, you could use the environment
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365 variable @samp{$HOME} (such as @file{$HOME/.emacs}) or the absolute path
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366 (as in @file{/home/wohler/.emacs}) instead.
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367
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368 At this point, you should see something like the screen in the
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369 figure in @ref{Reading Mail Tour}. We're now ready to move on.
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370
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371 @node Sending Mail Tour, Reading Mail Tour, Getting Started, Tour Through mh-e
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372 @section Sending Mail
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373
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374 @cindex sending mail
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375 @findex @code{mh-smail}
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376
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377 Let's start our tour by sending ourselves a message which we can later
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378 read and process. Enter @kbd{M-x mh-smail} to invoke the mh-e program
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379 to send messages. You will be prompted in the minibuffer by @samp{To:}.
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380 Enter your login name. The next prompt is @samp{cc:}. Hit @key{RET} to
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381 indicate that no carbon copies are to be sent. At the @samp{Subject:}
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382 prompt, enter @kbd{Test} or anything else that comes to mind.
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383
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384 @cindex MH-Letter mode
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385 @cindex modes, MH-Letter
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386 @cindex mode
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387
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388 Once you've specified the recipients and subject, your message appears
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389 in an Emacs buffer whose mode @footnote{A @dfn{mode} changes Emacs to
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390 make it easier to edit a particular type of text.} is MH-Letter.
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391 Enter some text in the body of the message, using normal Emacs commands.
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392 You should now have something like this: @footnote{If you're running Emacs
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393 under the X Window System, then you would also see a menubar. I've left
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394 out the menubar in all of the example screens.}
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395
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396 @example
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397 @group
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398 @cartouche
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399
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400
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401
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402
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403
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404
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405 -----Emacs: *scratch* (Lisp Interaction)--All---------------------
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406 To: wohler
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407 cc:
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408 Subject: Test
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409 --------
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410 This is a test message to get the wheels churning...#
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411
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412
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413 --**-@{draft@} (MH-Letter)--All----------------------------------------
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414
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415 @end cartouche
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416 @i{mh-e message composition window}
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417 @end group
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418 @end example
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419
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420 @cindex MH-Letter mode
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421 @cindex modes, MH-Letter
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422
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423 Note the line of dashes that separates the header and the body of the
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424 message. It is essential that these dashes (or a blank line) are
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425 present or the body of your message will be considered to be part of
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426 the header.
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427
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428 There are several commands specific to MH-Letter mode, but at
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429 this time we'll only use @kbd{C-c C-c} to send your message. Type
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430 @kbd{C-c C-c} now. That's all there is to it!
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431
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432 @node Reading Mail Tour, Processing Mail Tour, Sending Mail Tour, Tour Through mh-e
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433 @section Receiving Mail
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434
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435 @cindex reading mail
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436 @findex @code{mh-rmail}
|
|
437 @cindex @code{inc}
|
|
438 @cindex MH commands, @code{inc}
|
|
439 @cindex @code{scan}
|
|
440 @cindex MH commands, @code{scan}
|
|
441 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
442 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
443
|
|
444 To read the mail you've just sent yourself, enter @kbd{M-x mh-rmail}.
|
|
445 This incorporates the new mail and put the output from @code{inc}
|
|
446 (called @dfn{scan lines} after the MH program @code{scan} which prints a
|
|
447 one-line summary of each message) into a buffer called @samp{+inbox}
|
|
448 whose major mode is MH-Folder.
|
|
449
|
|
450 @sp 2
|
|
451 @need 1000
|
|
452 @center @strong{NOTE}
|
|
453
|
|
454 @quotation
|
|
455 The @kbd{M-x mh-rmail} command will show you only new mail, not old
|
|
456 mail. If you were to run this tour again, you would use @kbd{M-r} to
|
|
457 pull all your messages into mh-e.
|
|
458 @end quotation
|
|
459
|
|
460 You should see the scan line for your message, and perhaps others. Use
|
|
461 @kbd{n} or @kbd{p} to move the cursor to your test message and type
|
|
462 @key{RET} to read your message. You should see something like:
|
|
463
|
|
464 @example
|
|
465 @group
|
|
466 @cartouche
|
|
467 3 24Aug root received fax files on Wed Aug 24 11:00:13 PDT 1994
|
|
468 # 4+ 24Aug To:wohler Test<<This is a test message to get the wheels chu
|
|
469
|
|
470 --%%-@{+inbox@} 4 msgs (1-4) (MH-Folder Show)--Bot---------------------
|
|
471 To: wohler
|
|
472 Subject: Test
|
|
473 Date: Wed, 24 Aug 1994 13:01:13 -0700
|
|
474 From: Bill Wohler <wohler@@newt.com>
|
|
475
|
|
476 This is a test message to get the wheels churning...
|
|
477
|
|
478
|
|
479
|
|
480
|
|
481
|
|
482 -----@{show-+inbox@} 4 (MH-Show)--Bot----------------------------------
|
|
483
|
|
484 @end cartouche
|
|
485 @i{After incorporating new messages}
|
|
486 @end group
|
|
487 @end example
|
|
488
|
|
489 If you typed a long message, you can view subsequent pages with @key{SPC}
|
|
490 and previous pages with @key{DEL}.
|
|
491
|
|
492 @node Processing Mail Tour, Leaving mh-e, Reading Mail Tour, Tour Through mh-e
|
|
493 @section Processing Mail
|
|
494
|
|
495 @cindex processing mail
|
|
496
|
|
497 The first thing we want to do is reply to the message that we sent
|
|
498 ourselves. Ensure that the cursor is still on the same line as your
|
|
499 test message and type @kbd{r}. You are prompted in the minibuffer with
|
|
500 @samp{Reply to whom:}. Here mh-e is asking whether you'd like to reply
|
|
501 to the original sender only, to the sender and primary recipients, or to
|
|
502 the sender and all recipients. If you simply hit @key{RET}, you'll
|
|
503 reply only to the sender. Hit @key{RET} now.
|
|
504
|
|
505 You'll find yourself in an Emacs buffer similar to that when you were
|
|
506 sending the original message, like this:
|
|
507
|
|
508 @example
|
|
509 @group
|
|
510 @cartouche
|
|
511 To: wohler
|
|
512 Subject: Re: Test
|
|
513 In-reply-to: Bill Wohler's message of Wed, 24 Aug 1994 13:01:13 -0700
|
|
514 <199408242001.NAA00505@@newt.com>
|
|
515 --------
|
|
516 #
|
|
517
|
|
518 --**-@{draft@} (MH-Letter)--All----------------------------------------
|
|
519 To: wohler
|
|
520 Subject: Test
|
|
521 Date: Wed, 24 Aug 1994 13:01:13 -0700
|
|
522 From: Bill Wohler <wohler@@newt.com>
|
|
523
|
|
524 This is a test message to get the wheels churning...
|
|
525
|
|
526 -----@{show-+inbox@} 4 (MH-Show)--Bot----------------------------------
|
|
527 Composing a reply...done
|
|
528 @end cartouche
|
|
529 @i{Composition window during reply}
|
|
530 @end group
|
|
531 @end example
|
|
532
|
|
533 By default, MH will not add you to the address list of your replies, so
|
|
534 if you find that the @samp{To:} header field is missing, don't worry.
|
|
535 In this case, type @kbd{C-c C-f C-t} to create and go to the @samp{To:}
|
|
536 field, where you can type your login name again. You can move around
|
|
537 with the arrow keys or with @kbd{C-p} (@code{previous-line}), @kbd{C-n}
|
|
538 (@code{next-line}), @kbd{C-b} (@code{backward-char}), and @kbd{C-f}
|
|
539 (@code{forward-char}) and can delete the previous character with
|
|
540 @key{DEL}. When you're finished editing your message, send it with
|
|
541 @kbd{C-c C-c} as before.
|
|
542
|
|
543 @cindex folder
|
|
544
|
|
545 You'll often want to save messages that were sent to you in an organized
|
|
546 fashion. This is done with @dfn{folders}. You can use folders to keep
|
|
547 messages from your friends, or messages related to a particular topic.
|
|
548 With your cursor in the MH-Folder buffer and positioned on the message
|
|
549 you sent to yourself, type @kbd{o} to output (@code{refile} in MH
|
|
550 parlance) that message to a folder. Enter @kbd{test} at the
|
|
551 @samp{Destination:} prompt and type @kbd{y} (or @key{SPC}) when mh-e
|
|
552 asks to create the folder @samp{+test}. Note that a @samp{^} (caret)
|
|
553 appears next to the message number, which means that the message has
|
|
554 been marked for refiling but has not yet been refiled. We'll talk about
|
|
555 how the refile is actually carried out in a moment.
|
|
556
|
|
557 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
558 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
559
|
|
560 Your previous reply is now waiting in the system mailbox. You
|
|
561 incorporate this mail into your MH-Folder buffer named @samp{+inbox}
|
|
562 with the @kbd{i} command. Do this now. After the mail is incorporated,
|
|
563 use @kbd{n} or @kbd{p} to move the cursor to the new message, and read
|
|
564 it with @key{RET}. Let's delete this message by typing @kbd{d}. Note
|
|
565 that a @samp{D} appears next to the message number. This means that the
|
|
566 message is marked for deletion but is not yet deleted. To perform the
|
|
567 deletion (and the refile we did previously), use the @kbd{x} command.
|
|
568
|
|
569 @findex @code{mh-smail}
|
|
570
|
|
571 If you want to send another message you can use @kbd{m} instead of
|
|
572 @kbd{M-x mh-smail}. So go ahead, send some mail to your friends!
|
|
573
|
|
574 @node Leaving mh-e, More About mh-e, Processing Mail Tour, Tour Through mh-e
|
|
575 @section Leaving mh-e
|
|
576
|
|
577 @cindex Emacs, quitting
|
|
578 @cindex quitting
|
|
579
|
|
580 You may now wish to exit @code{emacs} entirely. Use @kbd{C-x C-c} to
|
|
581 exit @code{emacs}. If you exited without running @kbd{x} in the
|
|
582 @samp{+inbox} buffer, Emacs will offer to save it for you. Type @kbd{y}
|
|
583 or @key{SPC} to save @samp{+inbox} changes, which means to perform any refiles
|
|
584 and deletes that you did there.
|
|
585
|
|
586 If you don't want to leave Emacs, you can type @kbd{q} to bury (hide)
|
|
587 the mh-e folder or delete them entirely with @kbd{C-x k}. You can then
|
|
588 later recall them with @kbd{C-x b} or @kbd{M-x mh-rmail}.
|
|
589
|
|
590 @node More About mh-e, , Leaving mh-e, Tour Through mh-e
|
|
591 @section More About mh-e
|
|
592
|
|
593 These are the basic commands to get you going, but there are plenty
|
|
594 more. If you think that mh-e is for you, read @ref{Using mh-e} and
|
|
595 @ref{Customizing mh-e} to find out how you can:
|
|
596
|
|
597 @itemize @bullet
|
|
598 @item
|
|
599 Print your messages. (@ref{Printing} and @ref{Customizing Printing}.)
|
|
600 @item
|
|
601 Edit messages and include your signature. (@ref{Draft Editing}
|
|
602 and @ref{Customizing Draft Editing}.)
|
|
603 @item
|
|
604 Forward messages. (@ref{Forwarding} and @ref{Customizing Forwarding}.)
|
|
605 @item
|
|
606 Read digests. (@ref{Viewing}.)
|
|
607 @item
|
|
608 Edit bounced messages. (@ref{Old Drafts} and @ref{Customizing Old Drafts}.)
|
|
609 @item
|
|
610 Send multimedia messages. (@ref{Editing MIME} and @ref{Customizing Editing MIME}.)
|
|
611 @item
|
|
612 Process mail that was sent with @code{shar} or @code{uuencode}.
|
|
613 (@ref{Files and Pipes}.)
|
|
614 @item
|
|
615 Use sequences conveniently. (@ref{Sequences}.)
|
|
616 @item
|
|
617 Show header fields in different fonts. (@ref{Customizing Viewing}.)
|
|
618 @item
|
|
619 Find previously refiled messages. (@ref{Searching}.)
|
|
620 @item
|
|
621 Place messages in a file. (@ref{Files and Pipes}.)
|
|
622 @end itemize
|
|
623
|
|
624 Remember that you can also use MH commands when you're not running mh-e
|
|
625 (and when you are!).
|
|
626
|
|
627 @node Using mh-e, Customizing mh-e, Tour Through mh-e, Top
|
|
628 @chapter Using mh-e
|
|
629
|
|
630 This chapter leaves the tutorial style and goes into more detail about
|
|
631 every mh-e command. The default, or "out of the box," behavior is
|
|
632 documented. If this is not to your liking (for instance, you print with
|
|
633 something other than @code{lpr)}, see the associated section in
|
|
634 @ref{Customizing mh-e} which is organized exactly like this chapter.
|
|
635
|
|
636 @cindex Emacs, functions; describe-mode
|
|
637 @cindex Emacs, online help
|
|
638 @cindex online help
|
|
639
|
|
640 There are many commands, but don't get intimidated. There are command
|
|
641 summaries at the beginning of each section. In case you have or would
|
|
642 like to rebind the keys, the command summaries also list the associated
|
|
643 Emacs Lisp function. Furthermore, even if you're stranded on a desert
|
|
644 island with a laptop and are without your manuals, you can get a summary
|
|
645 of all these commands with GNU Emacs online help: use @kbd{C-h m}
|
|
646 (@code{describe-mode}) for a brief summary of commands or @kbd{C-h i} to
|
|
647 read this manual via Info. The online help is quite good; try running
|
|
648 @kbd{C-h C-h C-h}. This brings up a list of available help topics, one
|
|
649 of which displays the documentation for a given key (like @kbd{C-h k
|
|
650 C-n}). In addition, review @ref{Conventions}, if any of the GNU Emacs
|
|
651 conventions are strange to you.
|
|
652
|
|
653 Let's get started!
|
|
654
|
|
655 @menu
|
|
656 * Reading Mail::
|
|
657 * Sending Mail::
|
|
658 * Draft Editing::
|
|
659 * Moving Mail::
|
|
660 * Searching::
|
|
661 * Sequences::
|
|
662 * Miscellaneous::
|
|
663 @end menu
|
|
664
|
|
665 @node Reading Mail, Sending Mail, Using mh-e, Using mh-e
|
|
666 @section Reading Your Mail
|
|
667
|
|
668 @cindex reading mail
|
|
669 @findex @code{mh-rmail}
|
|
670 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
671 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
672
|
|
673 The mh-e entry point for reading mail is @kbd{M-x mh-rmail}. This
|
|
674 command incorporates your mail and creates a buffer called @samp{+inbox}
|
|
675 in MH-Folder mode. The @kbd{M-x mh-rmail} command shows you only new
|
|
676 mail, not old mail. @footnote{If you want to see your old mail as well,
|
|
677 use @kbd{M-r} to pull all your messages into mh-e. Or, give a prefix
|
|
678 argument to @code{mh-rmail} so it will prompt you for folder to visit
|
|
679 like @kbd{M-f} (for example, @kbd{C-u M-x mh-rmail @key{RET} bob
|
|
680 @key{RET}}). Both @kbd{M-r} and @kbd{M-f} are described in
|
|
681 @ref{Organizing}.} The @samp{+inbox} buffer contains @dfn{scan lines},
|
|
682 which are one-line summaries of each incorporated message. You can
|
|
683 perform most MH commands on these messages via one-letter commands
|
|
684 discussed in this chapter. See @code{scan}(1) for a description of the
|
|
685 contents of the scan lines, and see the Figure in @ref{Reading Mail
|
|
686 Tour}, for an example.
|
|
687
|
|
688 @table @kbd
|
|
689 @item RET
|
|
690 Display a message (@code{mh-show}).
|
|
691
|
|
692 @item SPC
|
|
693 Go to next page in message (@code{mh-page-msg}).
|
|
694
|
|
695 @item DEL
|
|
696 Go to previous page in message (@code{mh-previous-page}).
|
|
697
|
|
698 @item , (comma)
|
|
699 Display a message with all header fields (@code{mh-header-display}).
|
|
700
|
|
701 @item M-SPC
|
|
702 Go to next message in digest (@code{mh-page-digest}).
|
|
703
|
|
704 @item M-DEL
|
|
705 Go to previous message in digest (@code{mh-page-digest-backwards}).
|
|
706
|
|
707 @item M-b
|
|
708 Break up digest into separate messages (@code{mh-burst-digest}).
|
|
709
|
|
710 @item n
|
|
711 Display next message (@code{mh-next-undeleted-msg}).
|
|
712
|
|
713 @item p
|
|
714 Display previous message (@code{mh-previous-undeleted-msg}).
|
|
715
|
|
716 @item g
|
|
717 Go to a message (@code{mh-goto-msg}).
|
|
718
|
|
719 @item M-<
|
|
720 Go to first message (@code{mh-first-msg}).
|
|
721
|
|
722 @item M->
|
|
723 Go to last message (@code{mh-last-msg}).
|
|
724
|
|
725 @item t
|
|
726 Toggle between MH-Folder and MH-Folder Show modes (@code{mh-toggle-showing}).
|
|
727 @end table
|
|
728
|
|
729 @menu
|
|
730 * Viewing::
|
|
731 * Moving Around::
|
|
732 @end menu
|
|
733
|
|
734 @node Viewing, Moving Around, Reading Mail, Reading Mail
|
|
735 @subsection Viewing Your Mail
|
|
736
|
|
737 @findex @code{mh-show}
|
|
738 @findex @code{mh-page-msg}
|
|
739 @findex @code{mh-previous-page}
|
|
740
|
|
741 The @kbd{RET} (@code{mh-show}) command displays the message that the
|
|
742 cursor is on. If the message is already displayed, it scrolls to the
|
|
743 beginning of the message. Use @key{SPC} (@code{mh-page-msg}) and
|
|
744 @key{DEL} (@code{mh-previous-page}) to move forwards and backwards one
|
|
745 page at a time through the message. You can give either of these
|
|
746 commands a prefix argument that specifies the number of lines to scroll
|
|
747 (such as @kbd{10 SPC}). mh-e normally hides a lot of the
|
|
748 superfluous header fields that mailers add to a message, but if you wish
|
|
749 to see all of them, use the @kbd{,} (comma; @code{mh-header-display})
|
|
750 command.
|
|
751
|
|
752 @menu
|
|
753 * Reading Digests::
|
|
754 * Reading MIME::
|
|
755 @end menu
|
|
756
|
|
757 @node Reading Digests, Reading MIME, Viewing, Viewing
|
|
758 @subsubsection Reading Digests
|
|
759
|
|
760 @cindex digests
|
|
761 @findex @code{mh-page-digest}
|
|
762 @findex @code{mh-page-digest-backwards}
|
|
763
|
|
764 A digest is a message that contains other messages. Special mh-e
|
|
765 commands let you read digests conveniently. You can use @key{SPC} and
|
|
766 @key{DEL} to page through the digest as if it were a normal message, but
|
|
767 if you wish to skip to the next message in the digest, use @kbd{M-SPC}
|
|
768 (@code{mh-page-digest}). To return to a previous message, use
|
|
769 @kbd{M-DEL} (@code{mh-page-digest-backwards}).
|
|
770
|
|
771 @cindex @code{burst}
|
|
772 @cindex MH commands, @code{burst}
|
|
773 @cindex MH-Folder Show mode
|
|
774 @cindex modes, MH-Folder Show
|
|
775 @findex @code{mh-burst-digest}
|
|
776
|
|
777 @c There was a page break at the colon in the following paragraph which
|
|
778 @c broke the transition to the example.
|
|
779 @need 2000
|
|
780
|
|
781 Another handy command is @kbd{M-b} (@code{mh-burst-digest}). This
|
|
782 command uses the MH command @code{burst} to break out each message in
|
|
783 the digest into its own message. Using this command, you can quickly
|
|
784 delete unwanted messages, like this: Once the digest is split up, toggle
|
|
785 out of MH-Folder Show mode with @kbd{t} (@pxref{Moving Around}) so that
|
|
786 the scan lines fill the screen and messages aren't displayed. Then use
|
|
787 @kbd{d} (@pxref{Deleting}) to quickly delete messages that you don't
|
|
788 want to read (based on the @samp{Subject:} header field). You can also
|
|
789 burst the digest to reply directly to the people who posted the messages
|
|
790 in the digest. One problem you may encounter is that the @samp{From:}
|
|
791 header fields are preceded with a @samp{>} so that your reply can't
|
|
792 create the @samp{To:} field correctly. In this case, you must correct
|
|
793 the @samp{To:} field yourself. This is described later in @ref{Editing
|
|
794 Textual}.
|
|
795
|
|
796 @node Reading MIME, , Reading Digests, Viewing
|
|
797 @subsubsection Reading Multimedia Mail
|
|
798
|
|
799 @cindex multimedia mail
|
|
800 @cindex MIME
|
|
801 @cindex @code{show}
|
|
802 @cindex MH commands, @code{show}
|
|
803 @cindex @code{mhn}
|
|
804 @cindex MH commands, @code{mhn}
|
|
805
|
|
806 MH has the ability to read @dfn{@sc{mime}} (Multipurpose Internet Mail
|
|
807 Extensions) messages. Unfortunately, mh-e does not yet have this
|
|
808 ability, so you have to use the MH commands @code{show} or @code{mhn}
|
|
809 from the shell to read @sc{mime} messages. @footnote{You can call them
|
|
810 directly from Emacs if you're running the X Window System: type @kbd{M-!
|
|
811 xterm -e mhn @var{message-number}}. You can leave out the @code{xterm
|
|
812 -e} if you use @code{mhn -list} or @code{mhn -store}.}
|
|
813
|
|
814 @node Moving Around, , Viewing, Reading Mail
|
|
815 @subsection Moving Around
|
|
816
|
|
817 @cindex moving between messages
|
|
818 @findex @code{mh-next-undeleted-msg}
|
|
819 @findex @code{mh-previous-undeleted-msg}
|
|
820 @findex @code{mh-goto-msg}
|
|
821 @findex @code{mh-last-msg}
|
|
822 @findex @code{mh-first-msg}
|
|
823
|
|
824 To move on to the next message, use the @kbd{n}
|
|
825 (@code{mh-next-undeleted-msg}) command; use the @kbd{p}
|
|
826 (@code{mh-previous-undeleted-msg}) command to read the previous message.
|
|
827 Both of these commands can be given a prefix argument to specify how
|
|
828 many messages to skip (for example, @kbd{5 n}). You can also move to a
|
|
829 specific message with @kbd{g} (@code{mh-goto-msg}). You can enter the
|
|
830 message number either before or after typing @kbd{g}. In the latter
|
|
831 case, Emacs prompts you. Finally, you can go to the first or last
|
|
832 message with @kbd{M-<} (@code{mh-first-msg}) and @kbd{M->}
|
|
833 (@code{mh-last-msg}) respectively.
|
|
834
|
|
835 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
836 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
837
|
|
838 You can also use the Emacs commands @kbd{C-p} (@code{previous-line}) and
|
|
839 @kbd{C-n} (@code{next-line}) to move up and down the scan lines in the
|
|
840 MH-Folder window. These commands can be used in conjunction with
|
|
841 @kbd{RET} to look at deleted or refiled messages.
|
|
842
|
|
843 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
844 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
845 @cindex MH-Folder Show mode
|
|
846 @cindex modes, MH-Folder Show
|
|
847 @cindex junk mail
|
|
848 @findex @code{mh-toggle-showing}
|
|
849
|
|
850 The command @kbd{t} (@code{mh-toggle-showing}) switches between
|
|
851 MH-Folder mode and MH-Folder Show mode. @footnote{For you Emacs
|
|
852 wizards, this is implemented as an Emacs minor mode.} MH-Folder mode
|
|
853 turns off the associated show buffer so that you can perform operations
|
|
854 on the messages quickly without reading them. This is an excellent way
|
|
855 to prune out your junk mail or to refile a group of messages to another
|
|
856 folder for later examination.
|
|
857
|
|
858 @node Sending Mail, Draft Editing, Reading Mail, Using mh-e
|
|
859 @section Sending Mail
|
|
860
|
|
861 @cindex sending mail
|
|
862 @findex @code{mh-smail}
|
|
863
|
|
864 You can send a mail message in several ways. You can call @kbd{M-x
|
|
865 mh-smail} directly, or from the command line like this:
|
|
866
|
|
867 @cindex starting from command line
|
|
868
|
|
869 @example
|
|
870 % @kbd{emacs -f mh-smail}
|
|
871 @end example
|
|
872
|
|
873 From within mh-e's MH-Folder mode, other methods of sending mail
|
|
874 are available as well:
|
|
875
|
|
876 @table @kbd
|
|
877 @item m
|
|
878 Compose a message (@code{mh-send}).
|
|
879
|
|
880 @item r
|
|
881 Reply to a message (@code{mh-reply}).
|
|
882
|
|
883 @item f
|
|
884 Forward message(s) (@code{mh-forward}).
|
|
885
|
|
886 @item M-d
|
|
887 Redistribute a message (@code{mh-redistribute}).
|
|
888
|
|
889 @item M-e
|
|
890 Edit a message that was bounced by mailer (@code{mh-extract-rejected-mail}).
|
|
891
|
|
892 @item M-a
|
|
893 Edit a message to send it again (@code{mh-edit-again}).
|
|
894 @end table
|
|
895
|
|
896 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
897 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
898 @cindex MH-Letter mode
|
|
899 @cindex modes, MH-Letter
|
|
900 @findex @code{mh-send}
|
|
901
|
|
902 From within a MH-Folder buffer, you can simply use the command @kbd{m}
|
|
903 (@code{mh-send}). However you invoke @code{mh-send}, you are prompted
|
|
904 for the @samp{To:}, @samp{cc:}, and @samp{Subject:} header fields. Once
|
|
905 you've specified the recipients and subject, your message appears in an
|
|
906 Emacs buffer whose mode is MH-Letter (see the Figure in @ref{Sending
|
|
907 Mail} to see what the buffer looks like). MH-Letter mode allows you to
|
|
908 edit your message, to check the validity of the recipients, to insert
|
|
909 other messages into your message, and to send the message. We'll go
|
|
910 more into depth about editing a @dfn{draft} @footnote{I highly recommend
|
|
911 that you use a @dfn{draft folder} so that you can edit several drafts in
|
|
912 parallel. To do so, create a folder (e.g., @file{+drafts}), and add a
|
|
913 profile component called @samp{Draft-Folder:} which contains
|
|
914 @file{+drafts} (see @code{mh-profile}(5)).} (a message you're composing)
|
|
915 in just a moment.
|
|
916
|
|
917 @findex @code{mh-smail}
|
|
918 @findex @code{mh-smail-other-window}
|
|
919
|
|
920 @code{mh-smail} always creates a two-window layout with the current
|
|
921 buffer on top and the draft on the bottom. If you would rather preserve
|
|
922 the window layout, use @kbd{M-x mh-smail-other-window}.
|
|
923
|
|
924 @menu
|
|
925 * Replying::
|
|
926 * Forwarding::
|
|
927 * Redistributing::
|
|
928 * Old Drafts::
|
|
929 @end menu
|
|
930
|
|
931 @node Replying, Forwarding, Sending Mail, Sending Mail
|
|
932 @subsection Replying to Mail
|
|
933
|
|
934 @cindex replying
|
|
935 @cindex @code{mhl}
|
|
936 @cindex MH commands, @code{mhl}
|
|
937 @cindex @file{mhl.reply}
|
|
938 @cindex files, @file{mhl.reply}
|
|
939 @findex @code{mh-reply}
|
|
940
|
|
941 To compose a reply to a message, use the @kbd{r} (@code{mh-reply})
|
|
942 command. If you supply a prefix argument (as in @kbd{C-u r}), the
|
|
943 message you are replying to is inserted in your reply after having first
|
|
944 been run through @code{mhl} with the format file @file{mhl.reply}. See
|
|
945 @code{mhl}(1) to see how you can modify the default @file{mhl.reply}
|
|
946 file.
|
|
947
|
|
948 When you reply to a message, you are first prompted with @samp{Reply to
|
|
949 whom?}. You have several choices here.
|
|
950
|
|
951 @example
|
|
952 @group
|
|
953 @b{Response} @b{Reply Goes To}
|
|
954
|
|
955 @kbd{from} @r{The person who sent the message. This is the default,}
|
|
956 @r{so @key{RET} is sufficient.}
|
|
957
|
|
958 @kbd{to} @r{Replies to the sender, plus all recipients in the}
|
|
959 @r{@samp{To:} header field.}
|
|
960
|
|
961 @kbd{all}
|
|
962 @kbd{cc} @r{Forms a reply to the sender, plus all recipients.}
|
|
963 @end group
|
|
964 @end example
|
|
965
|
|
966 @cindex @code{repl}
|
|
967 @cindex MH commands, @code{repl}
|
|
968
|
|
969 Depending on your answer, @code{repl} is given a different argument to
|
|
970 form your reply. Specifically, a choice of @kbd{from} or none at all
|
|
971 runs @code{repl -nocc all}, and a choice of @kbd{to} runs @code{repl -cc
|
|
972 to}. Finally, either @kbd{cc} or @kbd{all} runs @code{repl -cc all
|
|
973 -nocc me}.
|
|
974
|
|
975 @cindex MH-Letter mode
|
|
976 @cindex modes, MH-Letter
|
|
977
|
|
978 Two windows are then created. One window contains the message to which
|
|
979 you are replying. Your draft, in MH-Letter mode (described in
|
|
980 @ref{Draft Editing}), is in the other window.
|
|
981
|
|
982 If you wish to customize the header or other parts of the reply draft,
|
|
983 please see @code{repl}(1) and @code{mh-format}(5).
|
|
984
|
|
985 @node Forwarding, Redistributing, Replying, Sending Mail
|
|
986 @subsection Forwarding Mail
|
|
987
|
|
988 @cindex forwarding
|
|
989 @cindex @code{forw}
|
|
990 @cindex MH commands, @code{forw}
|
|
991 @findex @code{mh-forward}
|
|
992
|
|
993 To forward a message, use the @kbd{f} (@code{mh-forward}) command. You
|
|
994 are given a draft to edit that looks like it would if you had run the MH
|
|
995 command @code{forw}. You are given a chance to add some text (see
|
|
996 @ref{Draft Editing}).
|
|
997
|
|
998 You can forward several messages by using a prefix argument; in this
|
|
999 case, you are prompted for the name of a @dfn{sequence}, a symbolic name
|
|
1000 that represents a list or range of message numbers (for example,
|
|
1001 @kbd{C-u f forbob @key{RET}}). All of the messages in the sequence are
|
|
1002 inserted into your draft. By the way, although sequences are often
|
|
1003 mentioned in this chapter, you don't have to worry about them for now;
|
|
1004 the full description of sequences in mh-e is at the end in
|
|
1005 @ref{Sequences}. To learn more about sequences in general, please see
|
|
1006 @code{mh-sequence}(5).
|
|
1007
|
|
1008 @node Redistributing, Old Drafts, Forwarding, Sending Mail
|
|
1009 @subsection Redistributing Your Mail
|
|
1010
|
|
1011 @cindex redistributing
|
|
1012 @findex @code{mh-redistribute}
|
|
1013
|
|
1014 The command @kbd{M-d} (@code{mh-redistribute}) is similar in function to
|
|
1015 forwarding mail, but it does not allow you to edit the message, nor does
|
|
1016 it add your name to the @samp{From:} header field. It appears to the
|
|
1017 recipient as if the message had come from the original sender. For more
|
|
1018 information on redistributing messages, see @code{dist}(1). Also
|
|
1019 investigate the @kbd{M-a} (@code{mh-edit-again}) command in @ref{Old
|
|
1020 Drafts}, for another way to redistribute messages.
|
|
1021
|
|
1022 @node Old Drafts, , Redistributing, Sending Mail
|
|
1023 @subsection Editing Old Drafts and Bounced Messages
|
|
1024
|
|
1025 @cindex re-editing drafts
|
|
1026 @cindex @file{draft}
|
|
1027 @cindex files, @file{draft}
|
|
1028 @findex @code{mh-edit-again}
|
|
1029
|
|
1030 If you don't complete a draft for one reason or another, and if the
|
|
1031 draft buffer is no longer available, you can pick your draft up again
|
|
1032 with @kbd{M-a} (@code{mh-edit-again}). If you don't use a draft folder,
|
|
1033 your last @file{draft} file will be used. If you use draft folders,
|
|
1034 you'll need to visit the draft folder with @kbd{M-f drafts @key{RET}},
|
|
1035 use @kbd{n} to move to the appropriate message, and then use @kbd{M-a}
|
|
1036 to prepare the message for editing.
|
|
1037
|
|
1038 The @kbd{M-a} command can also be used to take messages that were sent
|
|
1039 to you and to send them to more people.
|
|
1040
|
|
1041 @cindex Mailer-Daemon
|
|
1042 @findex @code{mh-extract-rejected-mail}
|
|
1043
|
|
1044 Don't use @kbd{M-a} to re-edit a message from a @i{Mailer-Daemon} who
|
|
1045 complained that your mail wasn't posted for some reason or another. In
|
|
1046 this case, use @kbd{M-e} (@code{mh-extract-rejected-mail}) to prepare
|
|
1047 the message for editing by removing the @i{Mailer-Daemon} envelope and
|
|
1048 unneeded header fields. Fix whatever addressing problem you had, and
|
|
1049 send the message again with @kbd{C-c C-c}.
|
|
1050
|
|
1051 @node Draft Editing, Moving Mail, Sending Mail, Using mh-e
|
|
1052 @section Editing a Draft
|
|
1053
|
|
1054 @cindex editing draft
|
|
1055 @cindex MH-Letter mode
|
|
1056 @cindex modes, MH-Letter
|
|
1057
|
|
1058 When you edit a message that you want to send (called a @dfn{draft} in
|
|
1059 this case), the mode used is MH-Letter. This mode provides
|
|
1060 several commands in addition to the normal Emacs editing commands to
|
|
1061 help you edit your draft.
|
|
1062
|
|
1063 @table @kbd
|
|
1064 @item C-c C-y
|
|
1065 Insert contents of message to which you're replying (@code{mh-yank-cur-msg}).
|
|
1066
|
|
1067 @item C-c C-i
|
|
1068 Insert a message from a folder (@code{mh-insert-letter}).
|
|
1069
|
|
1070 @item C-c C-f C-t
|
|
1071 Move to @samp{To:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1072
|
|
1073 @item C-c C-f C-c
|
|
1074 Move to @samp{cc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1075
|
|
1076 @item C-c C-f C-s
|
|
1077 Move to @samp{Subject:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1078
|
|
1079 @item C-c C-f C-f
|
|
1080 Move to @samp{From:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1081
|
|
1082 @item C-c C-f C-b
|
|
1083 Move to @samp{Bcc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1084
|
|
1085 @item C-c C-f C-f
|
|
1086 Move to @samp{Fcc:} header field (@code{mh-to-fcc}).
|
|
1087
|
|
1088 @item C-c C-f C-d
|
|
1089 Move to @samp{Dcc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1090
|
|
1091 @item C-c C-w
|
|
1092 Display expanded recipient list (@code{mh-check-whom}).
|
|
1093
|
|
1094 @item C-c C-s
|
|
1095 Insert signature in message (@code{mh-insert-signature}).
|
|
1096
|
|
1097 @item C-c C-m C-f
|
|
1098 Include forwarded message (@sc{mime}) (@code{mh-mhn-compose-forw}).
|
|
1099
|
|
1100 @item C-c C-m C-e
|
|
1101 Include anonymous ftp reference (@sc{mime}) (@code{mh-mhn-compose-anon-ftp}).
|
|
1102
|
|
1103 @item C-c C-m C-t
|
|
1104 Include anonymous ftp reference to compressed tar file (@sc{mime})
|
|
1105 (@code{mh-mhn-compose-external-compressed-tar}).
|
|
1106
|
|
1107 @item C-c C-m C-i
|
|
1108 Include binary, image, sound, etc. (@sc{mime})
|
|
1109 (@code{mh-mhn-compose-insertion}).
|
|
1110
|
|
1111 @item C-c C-e
|
|
1112 Run through @code{mhn} before sending (@code{mh-edit-mhn}).
|
|
1113
|
|
1114 @item C-c C-m C-u
|
|
1115 Undo effects of @code{mhn} (@code{mh-revert-mhn-edit}).
|
|
1116
|
|
1117 @item C-c C-c
|
|
1118 Save draft and send message (@code{mh-send-letter}).
|
|
1119
|
|
1120 @item C-c C-q
|
|
1121 Quit editing and delete draft message (@code{mh-fully-kill-draft}).
|
|
1122 @end table
|
|
1123
|
|
1124 @menu
|
|
1125 * Editing Textual::
|
|
1126 * Editing MIME::
|
|
1127 * Sending Message::
|
|
1128 * Killing Draft::
|
|
1129 @end menu
|
|
1130
|
|
1131 @node Editing Textual, Editing MIME, Draft Editing, Draft Editing
|
|
1132 @subsection Editing Textual Messages
|
|
1133
|
|
1134 The following sections show you how to edit a draft.
|
|
1135 The commands described here are also applicable to messages that have
|
|
1136 multimedia components.
|
|
1137
|
|
1138 @menu
|
|
1139 * Inserting Letter::
|
|
1140 * Inserting Messages::
|
|
1141 * Header::
|
|
1142 * Recipients::
|
|
1143 * Signature::
|
|
1144 @end menu
|
|
1145
|
|
1146 @node Inserting Letter, Inserting Messages, Editing Textual, Editing Textual
|
|
1147 @subsubsection Inserting letter to which you're replying
|
|
1148
|
|
1149 @cindex inserting messages
|
|
1150 @findex @code{mh-yank-cur-msg}
|
|
1151
|
|
1152 It is often useful to insert a snippet of text from a letter that
|
|
1153 someone mailed to provide some context for your reply. The command
|
|
1154 @kbd{C-c C-y} (@code{mh-yank-cur-msg}) does this by yanking a portion of
|
|
1155 text from the message to which you're replying and inserting @samp{> }
|
|
1156 before each line.
|
|
1157
|
|
1158 @cindex mark
|
|
1159 @cindex Emacs, mark
|
|
1160 @cindex point
|
|
1161 @cindex Emacs, point
|
|
1162 @cindex region
|
|
1163 @cindex Emacs, region
|
|
1164
|
|
1165 You can control how much text is included when you run this command. If
|
|
1166 you run this command right away, without entering the buffer containing
|
|
1167 the message to you, this command will yank the entire message, as is,
|
|
1168 into your reply. @footnote{If you'd rather have the header cleaned up,
|
|
1169 use @kbd{C-u r} instead of @kbd{r} when replying (see @ref{Replying}).}
|
|
1170 If you enter the buffer containing the message sent to you and move the
|
|
1171 cursor to a certain point and return to your reply and run @kbd{C-c
|
|
1172 C-y}, then the text yanked will range from that point to the end of the
|
|
1173 message. Finally, the most common action you'll perform is to enter the
|
|
1174 message sent to you, move the cursor to the beginning of a paragraph or
|
|
1175 phrase, set the @dfn{mark} with @kbd{C-SPC} or @kbd{C-@@}, and move the
|
|
1176 cursor to the end of the paragraph or phrase. The cursor position is
|
|
1177 called the @dfn{point}, and the space between the mark and point is
|
|
1178 called the @dfn{region}. Having done that, @kbd{C-c C-y} will insert
|
|
1179 the region you selected.
|
|
1180
|
|
1181 @node Inserting Messages, Header, Inserting Letter, Editing Textual
|
|
1182 @subsubsection Inserting messages
|
|
1183
|
|
1184 @cindex inserting messages
|
|
1185 @findex @code{mh-insert-letter}
|
|
1186
|
|
1187 Messages can be inserted with @kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{mh-insert-letter}).
|
|
1188 This command prompts you for the folder and message number and inserts
|
|
1189 the message, indented by @samp{> }. Certain undesirable header fields
|
|
1190 are removed before insertion. If given a prefix argument (like @kbd{C-u
|
|
1191 C-c C-i}), the header is left intact, the message is not indented, and
|
|
1192 @samp{> } is not inserted before each line.
|
|
1193
|
|
1194 @node Header, Recipients, Inserting Messages, Editing Textual
|
|
1195 @subsubsection Editing the header
|
|
1196
|
|
1197 @cindex editing header
|
|
1198 @findex @code{mh-to-field}
|
|
1199
|
|
1200 Because the header is part of the message, you can edit the header
|
|
1201 fields as you wish. However, several convenience functions exist to
|
|
1202 help you create and edit them. For example, the command @kbd{C-c C-f
|
|
1203 C-t} (@code{mh-to-field}; alternatively, @kbd{C-c C-f t}) moves the
|
|
1204 cursor to the @samp{To:} header field, creating it if necessary. The
|
|
1205 functions to move to the @samp{cc:}, @samp{Subject:}, @samp{From:},
|
|
1206 @samp{Bcc:}, and @samp{Dcc:} header fields are similar.
|
|
1207
|
|
1208 @findex @code{mh-to-fcc}
|
|
1209
|
|
1210 One function behaves differently from the others, namely, @kbd{C-c C-f
|
|
1211 C-f} (@code{mh-to-fcc}; alternatively, @kbd{C-c C-f f}). This function
|
|
1212 will prompt you for the folder name in which to file a copy of the draft.
|
|
1213
|
|
1214 Be sure to leave a row of dashes or a blank line between the header and
|
|
1215 the body of the message.
|
|
1216
|
|
1217 @node Recipients, Signature, Header, Editing Textual
|
|
1218 @subsubsection Checking recipients
|
|
1219
|
|
1220 @cindex checking recipients
|
|
1221 @cindex @code{whom}
|
|
1222 @cindex MH commands, @code{whom}
|
|
1223 @findex @code{mh-check-whom}
|
|
1224
|
|
1225 The @kbd{C-c C-w} (@code{mh-check-whom}) command expands aliases so you
|
|
1226 can check the actual address(es) in the alias. A new buffer is created
|
|
1227 with the output of @code{whom}.
|
|
1228
|
|
1229 @node Signature, , Recipients, Editing Textual
|
|
1230 @subsubsection Inserting your signature
|
|
1231
|
|
1232 @cindex inserting signature
|
|
1233 @cindex signature
|
|
1234 @cindex @file{.signature}
|
|
1235 @cindex files, @file{.signature}
|
|
1236 @findex @code{mh-insert-signature}
|
|
1237
|
|
1238 You can insert your signature at the current cursor location with the
|
|
1239 @kbd{C-c C-s} (@code{mh-insert-signature}) command. The text of your
|
|
1240 signature is taken from the file @file{~/.signature}.
|
|
1241
|
|
1242 @node Editing MIME, Sending Message, Editing Textual, Draft Editing
|
|
1243 @subsection Editing Multimedia Messages
|
|
1244
|
|
1245 @cindex MIME
|
|
1246 @cindex multimedia mail
|
|
1247 @cindex @code{mhn}
|
|
1248 @cindex MH commands, @code{mhn}
|
|
1249
|
|
1250 mh-e has the capability to create multimedia messages. It uses the
|
|
1251 @sc{mime} (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) protocol. The
|
|
1252 @sc{mime} protocol allows you to incorporate images, sound, video,
|
|
1253 binary files, and even commands that fetch a file with @samp{ftp} when
|
|
1254 your recipient reads the message! If you were to create a multimedia
|
|
1255 message with plain MH commands, you would use @code{mhn}. Indeed, the
|
|
1256 mh-e @sc{mime} commands merely insert @code{mhn} directives which are
|
|
1257 later expanded by @code{mhn}.
|
|
1258
|
|
1259 Each of the mh-e commands for editing multimedia messages or for
|
|
1260 incorporating multimedia objects is prefixed with @kbd{C-c C-m} .
|
|
1261
|
|
1262 @cindex content types
|
|
1263 @cindex MIME, content types
|
|
1264
|
|
1265 Several @sc{mime} objects are defined. They are called @dfn{content
|
|
1266 types}. The table in @ref{Customizing Draft Editing} contains a list of
|
|
1267 the content types that mh-e currently knows about. Several of the mh-e
|
|
1268 commands fill in the content type for you, whereas others require you to
|
|
1269 enter one. Most of the time, it should be obvious which one to use
|
|
1270 (e.g., use @kbd{image/jpeg} to include a @sc{jpeg} image). If not, you
|
|
1271 can refer to @sc{rfc} 1521,
|
|
1272 @c Footnotes are very fragile. Hence the duplication.
|
|
1273 @c The line break in the footnote was necessary since TeX wasn't creating one.
|
|
1274 @ifclear html
|
|
1275 @footnote{This @sc{rfc} (Request For Comments) is
|
|
1276 available via the @sc{url} @*
|
|
1277 @file{ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1521.txt}.}
|
|
1278 @end ifclear
|
|
1279 @ifset html
|
|
1280 @footnote{This @sc{rfc} (Request For Comments) is
|
|
1281 available via the @sc{url} @*
|
|
1282 @file{<A HREF="ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1521.txt">ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1521.txt</A>}.}
|
|
1283 @end ifset
|
|
1284 which defines the @sc{mime} protocol, for a list of valid content types.
|
|
1285
|
|
1286 @cindex content description
|
|
1287 @cindex MIME, content description
|
|
1288
|
|
1289 You are also sometimes asked for a @dfn{content description}. This is
|
|
1290 simply an optional brief phrase, in your own words, that describes the
|
|
1291 object. If you don't care to enter a content description, just press
|
|
1292 return and none will be included; however, a reader may skip over
|
|
1293 multimedia fields unless the content description is compelling.
|
|
1294
|
|
1295 Remember: you can always add @code{mhn} directives by hand.
|
|
1296
|
|
1297 @menu
|
|
1298 * Forwarding MIME::
|
|
1299 * FTP::
|
|
1300 * Tar::
|
|
1301 * Other MIME Objects::
|
|
1302 * Sending MIME::
|
|
1303 @end menu
|
|
1304
|
|
1305 @node Forwarding MIME, FTP, Editing MIME, Editing MIME
|
|
1306 @subsubsection Forwarding multimedia messages
|
|
1307
|
|
1308 @findex @code{mh-mhn-compose-forw}
|
|
1309
|
|
1310 Mail may be forwarded with @sc{mime} using the command @kbd{C-c C-m C-f}
|
|
1311 (@code{mh-mhn-compose-forw}). You are prompted for a content
|
|
1312 description, the name of the folder in which the messages to forward are
|
|
1313 located, and the messages' numbers.
|
|
1314
|
|
1315 @node FTP, Tar, Forwarding MIME, Editing MIME
|
|
1316 @subsubsection Including an ftp reference
|
|
1317
|
|
1318 @cindex @code{ftp}
|
|
1319 @cindex Unix commands, @code{ftp}
|
|
1320 @cindex MIME, @code{ftp}
|
|
1321 @findex @code{mh-mhn-compose-anon-ftp}
|
|
1322
|
|
1323 You can even have your message initiate an @code{ftp} transfer when the
|
|
1324 recipient reads the message. To do this, use the @kbd{C-c C-m C-e}
|
|
1325 (@code{mh-mhn-compose-anon-ftp}) command. You are prompted for the
|
|
1326 remote host and pathname, the content type, and the content description.
|
|
1327
|
|
1328 @node Tar, Other MIME Objects, FTP, Editing MIME
|
|
1329 @subsubsection Including tar files
|
|
1330
|
|
1331 @cindex @code{tar}
|
|
1332 @cindex Unix commands, @code{tar}
|
|
1333 @cindex MIME, @code{tar}
|
|
1334 @cindex @code{ftp}
|
|
1335 @cindex Unix commands, @code{ftp}
|
|
1336 @cindex MIME, @code{ftp}
|
|
1337 @findex @code{mh-mhn-compose-external-compressed-tar}
|
|
1338
|
|
1339 If the remote file (@pxref{FTP}) is a compressed tar file, you can use
|
|
1340 @kbd{C-c C-m C-t} (@code{mh-mhn-compose-external-compressed-tar}).
|
|
1341 Then, in addition to retrieving the file via anonymous @emph{ftp}, the
|
|
1342 file will also be uncompressed and untarred. You are prompted for the
|
|
1343 remote host and pathname and the content description. The pathname
|
|
1344 should contain at least one @samp{/} (slash), because the pathname is
|
|
1345 broken up into directory and name components.
|
|
1346
|
|
1347 @node Other MIME Objects, Sending MIME, Tar, Editing MIME
|
|
1348 @subsubsection Including other multimedia objects
|
|
1349
|
|
1350 @cindex images
|
|
1351 @cindex MIME, images
|
|
1352 @cindex sound
|
|
1353 @cindex MIME, sound
|
|
1354 @cindex video
|
|
1355 @cindex MIME, video
|
|
1356 @findex @code{mh-mhn-compose-insertion}
|
|
1357
|
|
1358 Images, sound, and video can be inserted in your message with the
|
|
1359 @kbd{C-c C-m C-i} (@code{mh-mhn-compose-insertion}) command. You are
|
|
1360 prompted for the filename containing the object, the content type, and a
|
|
1361 content description of the object.
|
|
1362
|
|
1363 @node Sending MIME, , Other MIME Objects, Editing MIME
|
|
1364 @subsubsection Readying multimedia messages for sending
|
|
1365
|
|
1366 When you are finished editing a @sc{mime} message, it might look like this:
|
|
1367
|
|
1368 @example
|
|
1369 @group
|
|
1370 @cartouche
|
|
1371 3 24Aug root received fax files on Wed Aug 24 11:00:13
|
|
1372 4+ 24Aug To:wohler Test<<This is a test message to get the wh
|
|
1373
|
|
1374
|
|
1375
|
|
1376
|
|
1377
|
|
1378 --%%-@{+inbox@} 4 msgs (1-4) (MH-Folder Show)--Bot-------------------
|
|
1379 To: wohler
|
|
1380 cc:
|
|
1381 Subject: Test of MIME
|
|
1382 --------
|
|
1383 #@@application/octet-stream [Nonexistent ftp test file] \
|
|
1384 access-type=anon-ftp; site=berzerk.com; name=panacea.tar.gz; \
|
|
1385 directory="/pub/"
|
|
1386 #audio/basic [Test sound bite] /tmp/noise.au
|
|
1387 --**-@{draft@} (MH-Letter)--All--------------------------------------
|
|
1388
|
|
1389 @end cartouche
|
|
1390 @i{mh-e @sc{mime} draft}
|
|
1391 @end group
|
|
1392 @end example
|
|
1393
|
|
1394 @cindex @code{mhn}
|
|
1395 @cindex MH commands, @code{mhn}
|
|
1396 @findex @code{mh-edit-mhn}
|
|
1397
|
|
1398 The lines added by the previous commands are @code{mhn} directives and
|
|
1399 need to be converted to @sc{mime} directives before sending. This is
|
|
1400 accomplished by the command @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{mh-edit-mhn}), which
|
|
1401 runs @code{mhn} on the message. The following screen shows what those
|
|
1402 commands look like in full @sc{mime} format. You can see why mail user
|
|
1403 agents are usually built to hide these details from the user.
|
|
1404
|
|
1405 @example
|
|
1406 @group
|
|
1407 @cartouche
|
|
1408 To: wohler
|
|
1409 cc:
|
|
1410 Subject: Test of MIME
|
|
1411 MIME-Version: 1.0
|
|
1412 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="----- =_aaaaaaaaaa0"
|
|
1413 Content-ID: <1623.777796162.0@@newt.com>
|
|
1414
|
|
1415 ------- =_aaaaaaaaaa0
|
|
1416 Content-Type: message/external-body; access-type="anon-ftp";
|
|
1417 site="berzerk.com"; name="panacea.tar.gz"; directory="/pub/"
|
|
1418
|
|
1419 Content-Type: application/octet-stream
|
|
1420 Content-ID: <1623.777796162.1@@newt.com>
|
|
1421 Content-Description: Nonexistent ftp test file
|
|
1422
|
|
1423 ------- =_aaaaaaaaaa0
|
|
1424 Content-Type: audio/basic
|
|
1425 Content-ID: <1623.777796162.2@@newt.com>
|
|
1426 Content-Description: Test sound bite
|
|
1427 Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
|
|
1428
|
|
1429 Q3JlYXRpdmUgVm9pY2UgRmlsZRoaAAoBKREBQh8AgwCAgH9/f35+fn59fX5+fn5+f39/f39/f3
|
|
1430 f4B/f39/f39/f39/f39/f39+f39+f39/f39/f4B/f39/fn5/f39/f3+Af39/f39/gH9/f39/fn
|
|
1431 -----@{draft@} (MH-Letter)--Top--------------------------------------
|
|
1432
|
|
1433 @end cartouche
|
|
1434 @i{mh-e @sc{mime} draft ready to send}
|
|
1435 @end group
|
|
1436 @end example
|
|
1437
|
|
1438 @findex @code{mh-revert-mhn-edit}
|
|
1439
|
|
1440 This action can be undone by running @kbd{C-c C-m C-u}
|
|
1441 (@code{mh-revert-mhn-edit}). It does this by reverting to a backup
|
|
1442 file. You are prompted to confirm this action, but you can avoid the
|
|
1443 confirmation by adding an argument (for example, @kbd{C-u C-c C-m C-u}).
|
|
1444
|
|
1445 @node Sending Message, Killing Draft, Editing MIME, Draft Editing
|
|
1446 @subsection Sending a Message
|
|
1447
|
|
1448 @cindex sending mail
|
|
1449 @findex @code{mh-send-letter}
|
|
1450
|
|
1451 When you are all through editing a message, you send it with the
|
|
1452 @kbd{C-c C-c} (@code{mh-send-letter}) command. You can give an argument
|
|
1453 (as in @kbd{C-u C-c C-c}) to monitor the first stage of the delivery.
|
|
1454
|
|
1455 @node Killing Draft, , Sending Message, Draft Editing
|
|
1456 @subsection Killing the Draft
|
|
1457
|
|
1458 @cindex killing draft
|
|
1459 @findex @code{mh-fully-kill-draft}
|
|
1460
|
|
1461 If for some reason you are not happy with the draft, you can kill it
|
|
1462 instead with @kbd{C-c C-q} (@code{mh-fully-kill-draft}). Emacs then
|
|
1463 kills the draft buffer and deletes the draft message.
|
|
1464
|
|
1465 @node Moving Mail, Searching, Draft Editing, Using mh-e
|
|
1466 @section Moving Your Mail Around
|
|
1467
|
|
1468 @cindex processing mail
|
|
1469
|
|
1470 This section covers how messages and folders can be moved about or
|
|
1471 manipulated. Messages may be incorporated into your @file{+inbox},
|
|
1472 deleted, and refiled. Messages containing @code{shar} or
|
|
1473 @code{uuencode} output can be stored. Folders can be visited, sorted,
|
|
1474 packed, or deleted. Here's a list of the available commands to do these
|
|
1475 things:
|
|
1476
|
|
1477 @c Stephen thinks that ? should be documented here, since it also shows
|
|
1478 @c which folders a message will be refiled to.
|
|
1479
|
|
1480 @table @kbd
|
|
1481 @item i
|
|
1482 Incorporate new mail into folder (@code{mh-inc-folder}).
|
|
1483
|
|
1484 @item d
|
|
1485 Delete message (@code{mh-delete-msg}).
|
|
1486
|
|
1487 @item C-d
|
|
1488 Delete message, don't move to next message (@code{mh-delete-msg-no-motion}).
|
|
1489
|
|
1490 @item M-s
|
|
1491 Find messages that meet search criteria (@code{mh-search-folder}).
|
|
1492
|
|
1493 @item o
|
|
1494 Output (refile) message to folder (@code{mh-refile-msg}).
|
|
1495
|
|
1496 @item c
|
|
1497 Copy message to folder (@code{mh-copy-msg}).
|
|
1498
|
|
1499 @item C-o
|
|
1500 Output (write) message to file (@code{mh-write-msg-to-file}).
|
|
1501
|
|
1502 @item !
|
|
1503 Repeat last output command (@code{mh-refile-or-write-again}).
|
|
1504
|
|
1505 @item l
|
|
1506 Print message with @code{lpr} (@code{mh-print-msg}).
|
|
1507
|
|
1508 @item |
|
|
1509 Pipe message through shell command (@code{mh-pipe-msg}).
|
|
1510
|
|
1511 @item M-n
|
|
1512 Unpack message created with @code{uudecode} or @code{shar}
|
|
1513 (@code{mh-store-msg}).
|
|
1514
|
|
1515 @item M-l
|
|
1516 List all folders (@code{mh-list-folders}).
|
|
1517
|
|
1518 @item M-f
|
|
1519 Visit folder (@code{mh-visit-folder}).
|
|
1520
|
|
1521 @item M-r
|
|
1522 Regenerate scan lines (@code{mh-rescan-folder}).
|
|
1523
|
|
1524 @item M-x mh-sort-folder
|
|
1525 Sort folder.
|
|
1526
|
|
1527 @item M-p
|
|
1528 Pack folder (@code{mh-pack-folder}).
|
|
1529
|
|
1530 @item M-k
|
|
1531 Remove folder (@code{mh-kill-folder}).
|
|
1532
|
|
1533 @item x
|
|
1534 Execute pending refiles and deletes (@code{mh-execute-commands}).
|
|
1535
|
|
1536 @item u
|
|
1537 Undo pending refile or delete (@code{mh-undo}).
|
|
1538
|
|
1539 @item M-u
|
|
1540 Undo all pending refiles and deletes (@code{mh-undo-folder}).
|
|
1541
|
|
1542 @item q
|
|
1543 Quit (@code{mh-quit}).
|
|
1544 @end table
|
|
1545
|
|
1546 @menu
|
|
1547 * Incorporating::
|
|
1548 * Deleting::
|
|
1549 * Organizing::
|
|
1550 * Printing::
|
|
1551 * Files and Pipes::
|
|
1552 * Finishing Up::
|
|
1553 @end menu
|
|
1554
|
|
1555 @node Incorporating, Deleting, Moving Mail, Moving Mail
|
|
1556 @subsection Incorporating Your Mail
|
|
1557
|
|
1558 @cindex incorporating
|
|
1559 @findex @code{mh-inc-folder}
|
|
1560
|
|
1561 If at any time you receive new mail, incorporate the new mail into your
|
|
1562 @samp{+inbox} buffer with @kbd{i} (@code{mh-inc-folder}). Note that
|
|
1563 @kbd{i} will display the @samp{+inbox} buffer, even if there isn't any
|
|
1564 new mail. You can incorporate mail from any file into the current
|
|
1565 folder by specifying a prefix argument; you'll be prompted for the name
|
|
1566 of the file to use (for example, @kbd{C-u i ~/mbox @key{RET}}).
|
|
1567
|
|
1568 @cindex Emacs, notification of new mail
|
|
1569 @cindex notification of new mail
|
|
1570 @cindex new mail
|
|
1571 @cindex @file{.emacs}
|
|
1572 @cindex files, @file{.emacs}
|
|
1573
|
|
1574 Emacs can notify you when you have new mail by displaying @samp{Mail} in
|
|
1575 the mode line. To enable this behavior, and to have a clock in the mode
|
|
1576 line besides, add the following to @file{~/.emacs}:
|
|
1577
|
|
1578 @findex @code{display-time}
|
|
1579
|
|
1580 @lisp
|
|
1581 (display-time)
|
|
1582 @end lisp
|
|
1583
|
|
1584 @node Deleting, Organizing, Incorporating, Moving Mail
|
|
1585 @subsection Deleting Your Mail
|
|
1586
|
|
1587 @cindex deleting
|
|
1588 @findex @code{mh-delete-msg}
|
|
1589 @findex @code{mh-delete-msg-no-motion}
|
|
1590
|
|
1591 To mark a message for deletion, use the @kbd{d} (@code{mh-delete-msg})
|
|
1592 command. A @samp{D} is placed by the message in the scan window, and
|
|
1593 the next message is displayed. If the previous command had been
|
|
1594 @kbd{p}, then the next message displayed is the message previous to the
|
|
1595 message just deleted. If you specify a prefix argument, you will be
|
|
1596 prompted for a sequence (@pxref{Sequences}) to delete (for example,
|
|
1597 @kbd{C-u d frombob RET}). The @kbd{x} command actually carries out the
|
|
1598 deletion (@pxref{Finishing Up}). @kbd{C-d}
|
|
1599 (@code{mh-delete-msg-no-motion}) marks the message for deletion but
|
|
1600 leaves the cursor at the current message in case you wish to perform
|
|
1601 other operations on the message.
|
|
1602
|
|
1603 @node Organizing, Printing, Deleting, Moving Mail
|
|
1604 @subsection Organizing Your Mail with Folders
|
|
1605
|
|
1606 @cindex using folders
|
|
1607 @cindex @code{folder}
|
|
1608 @cindex MH commands, @code{folder}
|
|
1609 @cindex @code{refile}
|
|
1610 @cindex MH commands, @code{refile}
|
|
1611 @findex @code{mh-refile-msg}
|
|
1612
|
|
1613 mh-e has analogies for each of the MH @code{folder} and @code{refile}
|
|
1614 commands. To refile a message in another folder, use the @kbd{o}
|
|
1615 (@code{mh-refile-msg}) (mnemonic: ``output'') command. You are prompted
|
|
1616 for the folder name.
|
|
1617
|
|
1618 @findex @code{mh-refile-or-write-again}
|
|
1619
|
|
1620 If you are refiling several messages into the same folder, you can use
|
|
1621 the @kbd{!} (@code{mh-refile-or-write-again}) command to repeat the last
|
|
1622 refile or write (see the description of @kbd{C-o} in @ref{Files and
|
|
1623 Pipes}). Or, place the messages into a sequence (@ref{Sequences}) and
|
|
1624 specify a prefix argument to @kbd{o}, in which case you'll be prompted
|
|
1625 for the name of the sequence (for example, @kbd{C-u o search RET}).
|
|
1626
|
|
1627 @findex @code{mh-copy-msg}
|
|
1628
|
|
1629 If you wish to copy a message to another folder, you can use the @kbd{c}
|
|
1630 (@code{mh-copy-msg}) command (see the @code{-link} argument to
|
|
1631 @code{refile}(1)). You are prompted for a folder, and you can specify a
|
|
1632 prefix argument if you want to copy a sequence into another folder. In
|
|
1633 this case, you are then prompted for the sequence. Note that unlike the
|
|
1634 @kbd{o} command, the copy takes place immediately. The original copy
|
|
1635 remains in the current folder.
|
|
1636
|
|
1637 @findex @code{mh-visit-folder}
|
|
1638
|
|
1639 When you want to read the messages that you have refiled into folders,
|
|
1640 use the @kbd{M-f} (@code{mh-visit-folder}) command to visit the folder.
|
|
1641 You are prompted for the folder name.
|
|
1642
|
|
1643 @findex @code{mh-list-folders}
|
|
1644 @findex @code{mh-visit-folder}
|
|
1645 @findex @code{mh-sort-folder}
|
|
1646 @findex @code{mh-pack-folder}
|
|
1647 @findex @code{mh-rescan-folder}
|
|
1648
|
|
1649 Other commands you can perform on folders include: @kbd{M-l}
|
|
1650 (@code{mh-list-folders}), to list all the folders in your mail
|
|
1651 directory; @kbd{M-k} (@code{mh-kill-folder}), to remove a folder;
|
|
1652 @kbd{M-x mh-sort-folder}, to sort the messages by date (see
|
|
1653 @code{sortm}(1) to see how to sort by other criteria); @kbd{M-p}
|
|
1654 (@code{mh-pack-folder}), to pack a folder, removing gaps from the
|
|
1655 numbering sequence; and @kbd{M-r} (@code{mh-rescan-folder}), to rescan
|
|
1656 the folder, which is useful to grab all messages in your @file{+inbox}
|
|
1657 after processing your new mail for the first time. If you don't want to
|
|
1658 rescan the entire folder, give @kbd{M-r} or @kbd{M-p} a prefix argument
|
|
1659 and you'll be prompted for a range of messages to display (for instance,
|
|
1660 @kbd{C-u M-r last:50 RET}).
|
|
1661
|
|
1662 @node Printing, Files and Pipes, Organizing, Moving Mail
|
|
1663 @subsection Printing Your Mail
|
|
1664
|
|
1665 @cindex printing
|
|
1666 @cindex @code{mhl}
|
|
1667 @cindex MH commands, @code{mhl}
|
|
1668 @cindex @code{lpr}
|
|
1669 @cindex Unix commands, @code{lpr}
|
|
1670 @findex @code{mh-print-msg}
|
|
1671
|
|
1672 Printing mail is simple. Enter @kbd{l} (@code{mh-print-msg}) (for
|
|
1673 @i{l}ine printer or @i{l}pr). The message is formatted with @code{mhl}
|
|
1674 and printed with the @code{lpr} command. You can print all the messages
|
|
1675 in a sequence by specifying a prefix argument, in which case you are
|
|
1676 prompted for the name of the sequence (as in @kbd{C-u l frombob RET}).
|
|
1677
|
|
1678 @node Files and Pipes, Finishing Up, Printing, Moving Mail
|
|
1679 @subsection Files and Pipes
|
|
1680
|
|
1681 @cindex using files
|
|
1682 @cindex using pipes
|
|
1683 @findex @code{mh-write-msg-to-file}
|
|
1684
|
|
1685 mh-e does offer a couple of commands that are not a part of MH@. The
|
|
1686 first one, @kbd{C-o} (@code{mh-write-msg-to-file}), writes a message to
|
|
1687 a file (think of the @kbd{o} as in "output"). You are prompted for the
|
|
1688 filename. If the file already exists, the message is appended to it.
|
|
1689 You can also write the message to the file without the header by
|
|
1690 specifying a prefix argument (such as @kbd{C-u C-o /tmp/foobar RET}).
|
|
1691 Subsequent writes to the same file can be made with the @kbd{!}
|
|
1692 command.
|
|
1693
|
|
1694 @findex @code{mh-pipe-msg}
|
|
1695
|
|
1696 You can also pipe the message through a Unix shell command with the
|
|
1697 @kbd{|} (@code{mh-pipe-msg}) command. You are prompted for the
|
|
1698 Unix command through which you wish to run your message. If you
|
|
1699 give an argument to this command, the message header is included in the
|
|
1700 text passed to the command (the contrived example @kbd{C-u | lpr}
|
|
1701 would be done with the @kbd{l} command instead).
|
|
1702
|
|
1703 @cindex @code{shar}
|
|
1704 @cindex Unix commands, @code{shar}
|
|
1705 @cindex @code{uuencode}
|
|
1706 @cindex Unix commands, @code{uuencode}
|
|
1707 @findex @code{mh-store-msg}
|
|
1708
|
|
1709 If the message is a shell archive @code{shar} or has been run through
|
|
1710 @code{uuencode} use @kbd{M-n} (@code{mh-store-msg}) to extract the body
|
|
1711 of the message. The default directory for extraction is the current
|
|
1712 directory, and you have a chance to specify a different extraction
|
|
1713 directory. The next time you use this command, the default directory is
|
|
1714 the last directory you used.
|
|
1715
|
|
1716 @node Finishing Up, , Files and Pipes, Moving Mail
|
|
1717 @subsection Finishing Up
|
|
1718
|
|
1719 @cindex expunging refiles and deletes
|
|
1720 @findex @code{mh-undo}
|
|
1721 @findex @code{mh-undo-folder}
|
|
1722
|
|
1723 If you've deleted a message or refiled it, but changed your mind, you
|
|
1724 can cancel the action before you've executed it. Use @kbd{u}
|
|
1725 (@code{mh-undo}) to undo a refile on or deletion of a single message.
|
|
1726 You can also undo refiles and deletes for messages that belong to a
|
|
1727 given sequence by specifying a prefix argument. You'll be prompted for
|
|
1728 the name of the sequence (as in @kbd{C-u u frombob RET}).
|
|
1729 Alternatively, you can use @kbd{M-u} (@code{mh-undo-folder}) to undo all
|
|
1730 refiles or deletes in the current folder.
|
|
1731
|
|
1732 @findex @code{mh-execute-commands}
|
|
1733
|
|
1734 If you've marked messages to be deleted or refiled and you want to go
|
|
1735 ahead and delete or refile the messages, use @kbd{x}
|
|
1736 (@code{mh-execute-commands}). Many mh-e commands that may affect the
|
|
1737 numbering of the messages (such as @kbd{M-r} or @kbd{M-p}) will ask if you
|
|
1738 want to process refiles or deletes first and then either run @kbd{x} for
|
|
1739 you or undo the pending refiles and deletes, which are lost.
|
|
1740
|
|
1741 @findex @code{mh-rmail}
|
|
1742 @findex @code{mh-quit}
|
|
1743
|
|
1744 When you want to quit using mh-e and go back to editing, you can use the
|
|
1745 @kbd{q} (@code{mh-quit}) command. This buries the buffers of the
|
|
1746 current mh-e folder and restores the buffers that were present when you
|
|
1747 first ran @kbd{M-x mh-rmail}. You can later restore your mh-e session
|
|
1748 by selecting the @samp{+inbox} buffer or by running @kbd{M-x mh-rmail}
|
|
1749 again.
|
|
1750
|
|
1751 @node Searching, Sequences, Moving Mail, Using mh-e
|
|
1752 @section Searching Through Messages
|
|
1753
|
|
1754 @cindex searching
|
|
1755 @findex @code{mh-search-folder}
|
|
1756
|
|
1757 You can search a folder for messages to or from a particular person or
|
|
1758 about a particular subject. In fact, you can also search for messages
|
|
1759 containing selected strings in any arbitrary header field or any string
|
|
1760 found within the messages. Use the @kbd{M-s} (@code{mh-search-folder})
|
|
1761 command. You are first prompted for the name of the folder to search
|
|
1762 and then placed in the following buffer in MH-Pick mode:
|
|
1763
|
|
1764 @example
|
|
1765 @group
|
|
1766 @cartouche
|
|
1767 From: #
|
|
1768 To:
|
|
1769 Cc:
|
|
1770 Date:
|
|
1771 Subject:
|
|
1772 --------
|
|
1773
|
|
1774
|
|
1775
|
|
1776
|
|
1777
|
|
1778
|
|
1779
|
|
1780
|
|
1781
|
|
1782 --**-Emacs: pick-pattern (MH-Pick)------All----------------------------
|
|
1783
|
|
1784 @end cartouche
|
|
1785 @i{Pick window}
|
|
1786 @end group
|
|
1787 @end example
|
|
1788
|
|
1789 @cindex @code{pick}
|
|
1790 @cindex MH commands, @code{pick}
|
|
1791
|
|
1792 Edit this template by entering your search criteria in an appropriate
|
|
1793 header field that is already there, or create a new field yourself. If
|
|
1794 the string you're looking for could be anywhere in a message, then place
|
|
1795 the string underneath the row of dashes. The @kbd{M-s} command uses the
|
|
1796 MH command @code{pick} to do the real work, so read @code{pick}(1) to
|
|
1797 find out more about how to enter the criteria.
|
|
1798
|
|
1799 There are no semantics associated with the search criteria---they are
|
|
1800 simply treated as strings. Case is ignored when all lowercase is used,
|
|
1801 and regular expressions (a la @code{ed}) are available. It is all right
|
|
1802 to specify several search criteria. What happens then is that a logical
|
|
1803 @emph{and} of the various fields is performed. If you prefer a logical
|
|
1804 @emph{or} operation, run @kbd{M-s} multiple times.
|
|
1805
|
|
1806 As an example, let's say that we want to find messages from Ginnean
|
|
1807 about horseback riding in the Kosciusko National Park (Australia) during
|
|
1808 January, 1994. Normally we would start with a broad search and narrow
|
|
1809 it down if necessary to produce a manageable amount of data, but we'll
|
|
1810 cut to the chase and create a fairly restrictive set of criteria as
|
|
1811 follows:
|
|
1812
|
|
1813 @example
|
|
1814 @group
|
|
1815 From: ginnean
|
|
1816 To:
|
|
1817 Cc:
|
|
1818 Date: Jan 1994
|
|
1819 Subject: horse.*kosciusko
|
|
1820 --------
|
|
1821 @end group
|
|
1822 @end example
|
|
1823
|
|
1824 @findex @code{mh-to-field}
|
|
1825
|
|
1826 As with MH-Letter mode, MH-Pick provides commands like
|
|
1827 @kbd{C-c C-f C-t} to help you fill in the blanks.
|
|
1828
|
|
1829 @table @kbd
|
|
1830 @item C-c C-f C-t
|
|
1831 Move to @samp{To:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1832
|
|
1833 @item C-c C-f C-c
|
|
1834 Move to @samp{cc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1835
|
|
1836 @item C-c C-f C-s
|
|
1837 Move to @samp{Subject:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1838
|
|
1839 @item C-c C-f C-f
|
|
1840 Move to @samp{From:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1841
|
|
1842 @item C-c C-f C-b
|
|
1843 Move to @samp{Bcc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1844
|
|
1845 @item C-c C-f C-f
|
|
1846 Move to @samp{Fcc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1847
|
|
1848 @item C-c C-f C-d
|
|
1849 Move to @samp{Dcc:} header field (@code{mh-to-field}).
|
|
1850
|
|
1851 @item C-c C-c
|
|
1852 Execute the search (@code{mh-do-pick-search}).
|
|
1853 @end table
|
|
1854
|
|
1855 @findex @code{mh-do-pick-search}
|
|
1856
|
|
1857 To perform the search, type @kbd{C-c C-c} (@code{mh-do-pick-search}).
|
|
1858 The selected messages are placed in the @i{search} sequence, which you
|
|
1859 can use later in forwarding (@pxref{Forwarding}), printing
|
|
1860 (@pxref{Printing}), or narrowing your field of view (@pxref{Sequences}).
|
|
1861 Subsequent searches are appended to the @i{search} sequence. If,
|
|
1862 however, you wish to start with a clean slate, first delete the
|
|
1863 @i{search} sequence (how to do this is discussed in @ref{Sequences}).
|
|
1864
|
|
1865 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
1866 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
1867
|
|
1868 If you're searching in a folder that is already displayed in a
|
|
1869 MH-Folder buffer, only those messages contained in the buffer are
|
|
1870 used for the search. Therefore, if you want to search in all messages,
|
|
1871 first kill the folder's buffer with @kbd{C-x k} or scan the entire
|
|
1872 folder with @kbd{M-r}.
|
|
1873
|
|
1874 @node Sequences, Miscellaneous, Searching, Using mh-e
|
|
1875 @section Using Sequences
|
|
1876
|
|
1877 @cindex sequences
|
|
1878
|
|
1879 For the whole scoop on MH sequences, refer to @code{mh-sequence}(5). As
|
|
1880 you've read, several of the mh-e commands can operate on a sequence,
|
|
1881 which is a shorthand for a range or group of messages. For example, you
|
|
1882 might want to forward several messages to a friend or colleague. Here's
|
|
1883 how to manipulate sequences.
|
|
1884
|
|
1885 @table @kbd
|
|
1886 @item %
|
|
1887 Put message in a sequence (@code{mh-put-msg-in-seq}).
|
|
1888
|
|
1889 @item ?
|
|
1890 Display sequences that message belongs to (@code{mh-msg-is-in-seq}).
|
|
1891
|
|
1892 @item M-q
|
|
1893 List all sequences in folder (@code{mh-list-sequences}).
|
|
1894
|
|
1895 @item M-%
|
|
1896 Remove message from sequence (@code{mh-delete-msg-from-seq}).
|
|
1897
|
|
1898 @item M-#
|
|
1899 Delete sequence (@code{mh-delete-seq}).
|
|
1900
|
|
1901 @item C-x n
|
|
1902 Restrict display to messages in sequence (@code{mh-narrow-to-seq}).
|
|
1903
|
|
1904 @item C-x w
|
|
1905 Remove restriction; display all messages (@code{mh-widen}).
|
|
1906
|
|
1907 @item M-x mh-update-sequences
|
|
1908 Push mh-e's state out to MH@.
|
|
1909 @end table
|
|
1910
|
|
1911 @cindex @code{pick}
|
|
1912 @cindex MH commands, @code{pick}
|
|
1913 @findex @code{mh-put-msg-in-seq}
|
|
1914
|
|
1915 To place a message in a sequence, use @kbd{%} (@code{mh-put-msg-in-seq})
|
|
1916 to do it manually, or use the MH command @code{pick} or the mh-e version
|
|
1917 of @code{pick} (@ref{Searching}) which create a sequence automatically.
|
|
1918 Give @kbd{%} a prefix argument and you can add all the messages in one
|
|
1919 sequence to another sequence (for example, @kbd{C-u % SourceSequence
|
|
1920 RET}).
|
|
1921
|
|
1922 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
1923 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
1924 @findex @code{mh-narrow-to-seq}
|
|
1925 @findex @code{mh-widen}
|
|
1926
|
|
1927 Once you've placed some messages in a sequence, you may wish to narrow
|
|
1928 the field of view to just those messages in the sequence you've created.
|
|
1929 To do this, use @kbd{C-x n} (@code{mh-narrow-to-seq}). You are prompted
|
|
1930 for the name of the sequence. What this does is show only those
|
|
1931 messages that are in the selected sequence in the MH-Folder buffer. In
|
|
1932 addition, it limits further mh-e searches to just those messages. When
|
|
1933 you want to widen the view to all your messages again, use @kbd{C-x w}
|
|
1934 (@code{mh-widen}).
|
|
1935
|
|
1936 @findex @code{mh-msg-is-in-seq}
|
|
1937 @findex @code{mh-list-sequences}
|
|
1938
|
|
1939 You can see which sequences a message is in with the @kbd{?}
|
|
1940 (@code{mh-msg-is-in-seq}) command.
|
|
1941 @c Doesn't work:
|
|
1942 @c use a prefix argument to query a
|
|
1943 @c message other than the current one (as in @kbd{C-u ? 42 RET}).
|
|
1944 Or, you can list all sequences in a selected folder (default is current
|
|
1945 folder) with @kbd{M-q} (@code{mh-list-sequences}).
|
|
1946
|
|
1947 @findex @code{mh-delete-msg-from-seq}
|
|
1948 @findex @code{mh-delete-seq}
|
|
1949
|
|
1950 If you want to remove a message from a sequence, use @kbd{M-%}
|
|
1951 (@code{mh-delete-msg-from-seq}), and if you want to delete an entire
|
|
1952 sequence, use @kbd{M-#} (@code{mh-delete-seq}). In the latter case you
|
|
1953 are prompted for the sequence to delete. Note that this deletes only
|
|
1954 the sequence, not the messages in the sequence. If you want to delete
|
|
1955 the messages, use @kbd{C-u d} (see @ref{Deleting} above).
|
|
1956
|
|
1957 @cindex @code{mark}
|
|
1958 @cindex MH commands, @code{mark}
|
|
1959
|
|
1960 @findex @code{mh-update-sequences}
|
|
1961
|
|
1962 Two sequences are maintained internally by mh-e and pushed out to MH
|
|
1963 when you type either the @kbd{x} or @kbd{q} command. They are the
|
|
1964 sequence specified by your @samp{Unseen-Sequence:} profile entry and
|
|
1965 @i{cur}. However, you can also just update MH's state with the command
|
|
1966 @kbd{M-x mh-update-sequences}. See @ref{Customizing Viewing} for an
|
|
1967 example of how this command might be used.
|
|
1968
|
|
1969 With the exceptions of @kbd{C-x n} and @kbd{C-x w}, the underlying MH
|
|
1970 command dealing with sequences is @code{mark}.
|
|
1971
|
|
1972 @node Miscellaneous, , Sequences, Using mh-e
|
|
1973 @section Miscellaneous Commands
|
|
1974
|
|
1975 @findex @code{mh-version}
|
|
1976
|
|
1977 One other command worth noting is @kbd{M-x mh-version}. Since there
|
|
1978 were a few changes in command letters between @w{Versions 3} and 4, use
|
|
1979 this command to see which version you are running. This command didn't
|
|
1980 exist before @w{Version 4}, so the message @samp{[No match]}
|
|
1981 indicates that it's time to upgrade (@pxref{Getting mh-e}). In the
|
|
1982 meantime, use the older commands that are listed in @ref{Changes to
|
|
1983 mh-e}. The output of @kbd{M-x mh-version} should also be included with
|
|
1984 any bug report you send (@pxref{Bug Reports}).
|
|
1985
|
|
1986 @node Customizing mh-e, Odds and Ends, Using mh-e, Top
|
|
1987 @chapter Customizing mh-e
|
|
1988
|
|
1989 Until now, we've talked about the mh-e commands as they work ``out of the
|
|
1990 box.'' Of course, it is also possible to reconfigure mh-e
|
|
1991 @c to fit the needs of even the most demanding user. ???
|
|
1992 beyond recognition. The following sections describe all of the
|
|
1993 customization variables, show the defaults, and make recommendations for
|
|
1994 customization. The outline of this chapter is identical to that of
|
|
1995 @ref{Using mh-e}, to make it easier to find the variables you'd need to
|
|
1996 modify to affect a particular command.
|
|
1997
|
|
1998 However, when customizing your mail environment, first try to change
|
|
1999 what you want in MH, and only change mh-e if changing MH is not
|
|
2000 possible. That way you will get the same behavior inside and outside
|
|
2001 GNU Emacs. Note that mh-e does not provide hooks for customizations
|
|
2002 that can be done in MH; this omission is intentional.
|
|
2003
|
|
2004 @cindex @file{.emacs}
|
|
2005 @cindex files, @file{.emacs}
|
|
2006
|
|
2007 Many string or integer variables are easy enough to modify using Emacs
|
|
2008 Lisp. Any such modifications should be placed in a file called
|
|
2009 @file{.emacs} in your home directory (that is, @file{~/.emacs}). For
|
|
2010 example, to modify the variable that controls printing, you could add:
|
|
2011
|
|
2012 @vindex @code{mh-lpr-command-format}, example
|
|
2013
|
|
2014 @lisp
|
|
2015 (setq mh-lpr-command-format "nenscript -G -r -2 -i'%s'")
|
|
2016 @end lisp
|
|
2017
|
|
2018 @ref{Customizing Printing} talks more about this variable.
|
|
2019
|
|
2020 @cindex setting variables
|
|
2021 @cindex Emacs, setting variables
|
|
2022
|
|
2023 Variables can also hold Boolean values. In Emacs Lisp, the Boolean
|
|
2024 values are @code{nil}, which means false, and @code{t}, which means true.
|
|
2025 Usually, variables are turned off by setting their value to @code{nil}, as
|
|
2026 in
|
|
2027
|
|
2028 @vindex @code{mh-bury-show-buffer}, example
|
|
2029
|
|
2030 @lisp
|
|
2031 (setq mh-bury-show-buffer nil)
|
|
2032 @end lisp
|
|
2033
|
|
2034 which keeps the MH-Show buffer at the top of the buffer stack.
|
|
2035 To turn a variable on, you use
|
|
2036
|
|
2037 @lisp
|
|
2038 (setq mh-bury-show-buffer t)
|
|
2039 @end lisp
|
|
2040
|
|
2041 which places the MH-Show buffer at the bottom of the buffer
|
|
2042 stack. However, the text says to turn on a variable by setting it to a
|
|
2043 @emph{non-@code{nil}} value, because sometimes values other than @code{t} are
|
|
2044 meaningful (for example, see @code{mhl-formfile}, described in
|
|
2045 @ref{Customizing Viewing}). Other variables, such as hooks, involve a
|
|
2046 little more Emacs Lisp programming expertise.
|
|
2047
|
|
2048 You can also ``preview'' the effects of changing variables before
|
|
2049 committing the changes to @file{~/.emacs}. Variables can be changed in
|
|
2050 the current Emacs session by using @kbd{M-x set-variable}.
|
|
2051
|
|
2052 @c XXX Stephen says: would be easier to just call them functions, which
|
|
2053 @c you mostly do.
|
|
2054 In general, @dfn{commands} in this text refer to Emacs Lisp functions.
|
|
2055 Programs outside of Emacs are specifically called MH commands, shell
|
|
2056 commands, or Unix commands.
|
|
2057
|
|
2058 @cindex Emacs, Emacs Lisp manual
|
|
2059 @cindex Emacs, online help
|
|
2060 @cindex online help
|
|
2061 @cindex Emacs, info
|
|
2062 @cindex info
|
|
2063
|
|
2064 I hope I've included enough examples here to get you well on your way.
|
|
2065 If you want to explore Emacs Lisp further, a programming manual does
|
|
2066 exist,
|
|
2067 @c Yes, some of the stuff in the following sections is redundant, but
|
|
2068 @c TeX barfs if the @ifs are inside the @footnote.
|
|
2069 @iftex
|
|
2070 @footnote{The @cite{GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual} may be available
|
|
2071 online in the Info system by typing @kbd{C-h i m Emacs Lisp RET}. If
|
|
2072 not, you can order a printed manual, which has the desirable side-effect
|
|
2073 of helping to support the Free Software Foundation which made all this
|
|
2074 great software available. You can find an order form by running
|
|
2075 @kbd{C-h C-d}, or you can request an order form from
|
|
2076 @i{gnu@@gnu.org}.}
|
|
2077 @end iftex
|
|
2078 @ifinfo
|
|
2079 @footnote{Perhaps you can find the online version of @ref{Top, The GNU
|
|
2080 Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, , elisp, GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
|
|
2081 If not, you can order a printed manual, which has the desirable
|
|
2082 side-effect of helping to support the Free Software Foundation which
|
|
2083 made all this great software available. You can find an order form by
|
|
2084 running @kbd{C-h C-d}, or you can request an order form from
|
|
2085 @i{gnu@@gnu.org}.}
|
|
2086 @end ifinfo
|
|
2087 and you can look at the code itself for examples. Look in the Emacs
|
|
2088 Lisp directory on your system (such as @file{/usr/local/lib/emacs/lisp})
|
|
2089 and find all the @file{mh-*.el} files there. When calling mh-e and
|
|
2090 other Emacs Lisp functions directly from Emacs Lisp code, you'll need to
|
|
2091 know the correct arguments. Use the online help for this. For example,
|
|
2092 try @kbd{C-h f mh-execute-commands RET}. If you write your own
|
|
2093 functions, please do not prefix your symbols (variables and functions)
|
|
2094 with @code{mh-}. This prefix is reserved for the mh-e package. To
|
|
2095 avoid conflicts with existing mh-e symbols, use a prefix like @code{my-}
|
|
2096 or your initials.
|
|
2097
|
|
2098 @menu
|
|
2099 * Customizing Reading::
|
|
2100 * Customizing Sending::
|
|
2101 * Customizing Draft Editing::
|
|
2102 * Customizing Moving Mail::
|
|
2103 * Customizing Searching::
|
|
2104 @end menu
|
|
2105
|
|
2106 @node Customizing Reading, Customizing Sending, Customizing mh-e, Customizing mh-e
|
|
2107 @section Reading Your Mail
|
|
2108
|
|
2109 @cindex reading mail
|
|
2110 @cindex @file{.emacs}
|
|
2111 @cindex files, @file{.emacs}
|
|
2112
|
|
2113 I'll start out by including a function that I use as a front end to
|
|
2114 mh-e. @footnote{Stephen Gildea's favorite binding is
|
|
2115 @kbd{(global-set-key "\C-cr" 'mh-rmail)}.} It toggles between your
|
|
2116 working window configuration, which may be quite involved---windows
|
|
2117 filled with source, compilation output, man pages, and other
|
|
2118 documentation---and your mh-e window configuration. Like the rest of
|
|
2119 the customization described in this chapter, simply add the following
|
|
2120 code to @file{~/.emacs}. Don't be intimidated by the size of this
|
|
2121 example; most customizations are only one line.
|
|
2122
|
|
2123 @iftex
|
|
2124 @filbreak
|
|
2125 @end iftex
|
|
2126
|
|
2127 @findex @code{mh-rmail}, example
|
|
2128
|
|
2129 @lisp
|
|
2130 @group
|
|
2131 @i{Starting mh-e}
|
|
2132
|
|
2133 (defvar my-mh-screen-saved nil
|
|
2134 "Set to non-@code{nil} when mh-e window configuration shown.")
|
|
2135 (defvar my-normal-screen nil "Normal window configuration.")
|
|
2136 (defvar my-mh-screen nil "mh-e window configuration.")
|
|
2137
|
|
2138 (defun my-mh-rmail (&optional arg)
|
|
2139 "Toggle between mh-e and normal screen configurations.
|
|
2140 With non-@code{nil} or prefix argument, @i{inc} mailbox as well
|
|
2141 when going into mail."
|
|
2142 (interactive "P") ; @r{user callable function, P=prefix arg}
|
|
2143 (setq my-mh-screen-saved ; @r{save state}
|
|
2144 (cond
|
|
2145 ;; @r{Bring up mh-e screen if arg or normal window configuration.}
|
|
2146 ;; @r{If arg or +inbox buffer doesn't exist, run mh-rmail.}
|
|
2147 ((or arg (null my-mh-screen-saved))
|
|
2148 (setq my-normal-screen (current-window-configuration))
|
|
2149 (if (or arg (null (get-buffer "+inbox")))
|
|
2150 (mh-rmail)
|
|
2151 (set-window-configuration my-mh-screen))
|
|
2152 t) ; @r{set my-mh-screen-saved to @code{t}}
|
|
2153 ;; @r{Otherwise, save mh-e screen and restore normal screen.}
|
|
2154 (t
|
|
2155 (setq my-mh-screen (current-window-configuration))
|
|
2156 (set-window-configuration my-normal-screen)
|
|
2157 nil)))) ; @r{set my-mh-screen-saved to nil}
|
|
2158
|
|
2159 (global-set-key "\C-x\r" 'my-mh-rmail) ;@r{ call with C-x RET}
|
|
2160 @end group
|
|
2161 @end lisp
|
|
2162
|
|
2163 If you type an argument (@kbd{C-u}) or if @code{my-mh-screen-saved}
|
|
2164 is @code{nil} (meaning a non-mh-e window configuration), the current window
|
|
2165 configuration is saved, either +inbox is displayed or @code{mh-rmail} is
|
|
2166 run, and the mh-e window configuration is shown. Otherwise, the mh-e
|
|
2167 window configuration is saved and the original configuration is
|
|
2168 displayed.
|
|
2169
|
|
2170 Now to configure mh-e. The following table lists general mh-e variables
|
|
2171 and variables that are used while reading mail.
|
|
2172 @c XXX Seth wishes the descriptions to be more parallel. That is,
|
|
2173 @c some are actions, and some are objects. Hmmm.
|
|
2174
|
|
2175 @table @code
|
|
2176 @item mh-progs
|
|
2177 Directory containing MH programs (default: dynamic).
|
|
2178
|
|
2179 @item mh-lib
|
|
2180 Directory containing MH support files and programs (default: dynamic).
|
|
2181
|
|
2182 @item mh-do-not-confirm
|
|
2183 Don't confirm on non-reversible commands (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2184
|
|
2185 @item mh-summary-height
|
|
2186 Number of scan lines to show (includes mode line) (default: 4).
|
|
2187
|
|
2188 @item mh-folder-mode-hook
|
|
2189 Functions to run in MH-Folder mode (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2190
|
|
2191 @item mh-clean-message-header
|
|
2192 Remove extraneous headers (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2193
|
|
2194 @item mh-invisible-headers
|
|
2195 Headers to hide (default: @samp{"^Received: \\| ^Message-Id: \\|
|
|
2196 ^Remailed-\\| ^Via: \\| ^Mail-from: \\| ^Return-Path: \\| ^In-Reply-To:
|
|
2197 \\| ^Resent-"}).
|
|
2198
|
|
2199 @item mh-visible-headers
|
|
2200 Headers to display (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2201
|
|
2202 @item mhl-formfile
|
|
2203 Format file for @code{mhl} (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2204
|
|
2205 @item mh-show-hook
|
|
2206 Functions to run when showing message (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2207
|
|
2208 @item mh-show-mode-hook
|
|
2209 Functions to run when showing message (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2210
|
|
2211 @item mh-bury-show-buffer
|
|
2212 Leave show buffer at bottom of stack (default: @code{t}).
|
|
2213
|
|
2214 @item mh-show-buffer-mode-line-buffer-id
|
|
2215 Name of show buffer in mode line (default: @samp{"@{show-%s@} %d"}).
|
|
2216 @end table
|
|
2217
|
|
2218 @vindex @code{mh-progs}
|
|
2219 @vindex @code{mh-lib}
|
|
2220
|
|
2221 The two variables @code{mh-progs} and @code{mh-lib} are used to tell
|
|
2222 mh-e where the MH programs and supporting files are kept, respectively.
|
|
2223 mh-e does try to figure out where they are kept for itself by looking in
|
|
2224 common places and in the user's @samp{PATH} environment variable, but if
|
|
2225 it cannot find the directories, or finds the wrong ones, you should set
|
|
2226 these variables. The name of the directory should be placed in double
|
|
2227 quotes, and there should be a
|
|
2228 trailing slash (@samp{/}). See the example in @ref{Getting Started}.
|
|
2229
|
|
2230 @vindex @code{mh-do-not-confirm}
|
|
2231
|
|
2232 If you never make mistakes, and you do not like confirmations for your
|
|
2233 actions, you can set @code{mh-do-not-confirm} to a non-@code{nil} value to
|
|
2234 disable confirmation for unrecoverable commands such as @kbd{M-k}
|
|
2235 (@code{mh-kill-folder}) and @kbd{M-u} (@code{mh-undo-folder}). Here's
|
|
2236 how you set boolean values:
|
|
2237
|
|
2238 @lisp
|
|
2239 (setq mh-do-not-confirm t)
|
|
2240 @end lisp
|
|
2241
|
|
2242 @vindex @code{mh-summary-height}
|
|
2243 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
2244 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
2245
|
|
2246 @c Prevent page break between paragraph and example.
|
|
2247 @need 2000
|
|
2248 The variable @code{mh-summary-height} controls the number of scan lines
|
|
2249 displayed in the MH-Folder window, including the mode line. The
|
|
2250 default value of 4 means that 3 scan lines are displayed. Here's how
|
|
2251 you set numerical values:
|
|
2252
|
|
2253 @lisp
|
|
2254 (setq mh-summary-height 2) ; @r{only show the current scan line}
|
|
2255 @end lisp
|
|
2256
|
|
2257 @vindex @code{mh-bury-show-buffer}
|
|
2258 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
2259 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
2260
|
|
2261 Normally the buffer for displaying messages is buried at the bottom at
|
|
2262 the buffer stack. You may wish to disable this feature by setting
|
|
2263 @code{mh-bury-show-buffer} to @code{nil}. One advantage of not burying the
|
|
2264 show buffer is that one can delete the show buffer more easily in an
|
|
2265 electric buffer list because of its proximity to its associated
|
|
2266 MH-Folder buffer. Try running @kbd{M-x electric-buffer-list} to
|
|
2267 see what I mean.
|
|
2268
|
|
2269 @vindex @code{mh-folder-mode-hook}
|
|
2270 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
2271 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
2272
|
|
2273 The hook @code{mh-folder-mode-hook} is called when a new folder is
|
|
2274 created with MH-Folder mode. This could be used to set your own
|
|
2275 key bindings, for example:
|
|
2276
|
|
2277 @vindex @code{mh-folder-mode-hook}, example
|
|
2278
|
|
2279 @lisp
|
|
2280 @group
|
|
2281 @i{Create additional key bindings via mh-folder-mode-hook}
|
|
2282
|
|
2283 (defvar my-mh-init-done nil "Non-@code{nil} when one-time mh-e settings made.")
|
|
2284
|
|
2285 (defun my-mh-folder-mode-hook ()
|
|
2286 "Hook to set key bindings in MH-Folder mode."
|
|
2287 (if (not my-mh-init-done) ; @r{only need to bind the keys once }
|
|
2288 (progn
|
|
2289 (local-set-key "/" 'search-msg)
|
|
2290 (local-set-key "b" 'mh-burst-digest) ; @r{better use of @kbd{b}}
|
|
2291 (setq my-mh-init-done t))))
|
|
2292
|
|
2293 ;;; @r{Emacs 19}
|
|
2294 (add-hook 'mh-folder-mode-hook 'my-mh-folder-mode-hook)
|
|
2295 ;;; @r{Emacs 18}
|
|
2296 ;;; @r{(setq mh-folder-mode-hook (cons 'my-mh-folder-mode-hook}
|
|
2297 ;;; @r{mh-folder-mode-hook))}
|
|
2298
|
|
2299 (defun search-msg ()
|
|
2300 "Search for a regexp in the current message."
|
|
2301 (interactive) ; @r{user function}
|
|
2302 (save-window-excursion
|
|
2303 (other-window 1) ; @r{go to next window}
|
|
2304 (isearch-forward-regexp))) ; @r{string search; hit return (ESC}
|
|
2305 ; @r{in Emacs 18) when done}
|
|
2306 @end group
|
|
2307 @end lisp
|
|
2308
|
|
2309 @menu
|
|
2310 * Customizing Viewing::
|
|
2311 * Customizing Moving Around::
|
|
2312 @end menu
|
|
2313
|
|
2314 @node Customizing Viewing, Customizing Moving Around, Customizing Reading, Customizing Reading
|
|
2315 @subsection Viewing Your Mail
|
|
2316
|
|
2317 @vindex @code{mh-clean-message-header}
|
|
2318 @vindex @code{mh-invisible-headers}
|
|
2319 @vindex @code{mh-visible-headers}
|
|
2320
|
|
2321 Several variables control what displayed messages look like. Normally
|
|
2322 messages are delivered with a handful of uninteresting header fields.
|
|
2323 You can make them go away by setting @code{mh-clean-message-header} to a
|
|
2324 non-@code{nil} value. The header can then be cleaned up in two ways. By
|
|
2325 default, the header fields in @code{mh-invisible-headers} are removed.
|
|
2326 On the other hand, you could set @code{mh-visible-headers} to the fields
|
|
2327 that you would like to see. If this variable is set,
|
|
2328 @code{mh-invisible-headers} is ignored. I suggest that you not set
|
|
2329 @code{mh-visible-headers} since if you use this variable, you might miss
|
|
2330 a lot of header fields that you'd rather not miss. As an example of how
|
|
2331 to set a string variable, @code{mh-visible-headers} can be set to show a
|
|
2332 minimum set of header fields (see (@ref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular
|
|
2333 Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for a description of the
|
|
2334 special characters in this string):
|
|
2335
|
|
2336 @lisp
|
|
2337 (setq mh-visible-headers "^From: \\|^Subject: \\|^Date: ")
|
|
2338 @end lisp
|
|
2339
|
|
2340 @cindex @code{mhl}
|
|
2341 @cindex MH commands, @code{mhl}
|
|
2342 @vindex @code{mhl-formfile}
|
|
2343
|
|
2344 Normally mh-e takes care of displaying messages itself (rather than
|
|
2345 calling an MH program to do the work). If you'd rather have @code{mhl}
|
|
2346 display the message (within mh-e), set the variable @code{mhl-formfile}
|
|
2347 to a non-@code{nil} value. You can set this variable either to @code{t}
|
|
2348 to use the default format file or to a filename if you have your own
|
|
2349 format file (@code{mhl}(1) tells you how to write one). When writing
|
|
2350 your own format file, use a nonzero value for @code{overflowoffset} to
|
|
2351 ensure the header is RFC 822 compliant and parsable by mh-e.
|
|
2352 @code{mhl} is always used for printing and forwarding; in this case, the
|
|
2353 value of @code{mhl-formfile} is consulted if it is a filename.
|
|
2354
|
|
2355 @vindex @code{mh-show-mode-hook}
|
|
2356
|
|
2357 Two hooks can be used to control how messages are displayed. The first
|
|
2358 hook, @code{mh-show-mode-hook}, is called early on in the process of
|
|
2359 displaying of messages. It is used to perform some actions on the
|
|
2360 contents of messages, such as highlighting the header fields. If you're
|
|
2361 running Emacs 19 under the X Window System, the following example will
|
|
2362 highlight the @samp{From:} and @samp{Subject:} header fields. This is a
|
|
2363 very nice feature indeed.
|
|
2364
|
|
2365 @vindex @code{mh-show-mode-hook}, example
|
|
2366
|
|
2367 @lisp
|
|
2368 @group
|
|
2369 @i{Emphasize header fields in different fonts via mh-show-mode-hook}
|
|
2370
|
|
2371 (defvar my-mh-keywords
|
|
2372 '(("^From: \\(.*\\)" 1 'bold t)
|
|
2373 ("^Subject: \\(.*\\)" 1 'highlight t))
|
|
2374 "mh-e additions for font-lock-keywords.")
|
|
2375
|
|
2376 (defun my-mh-show-mode-hook ()
|
|
2377 "Hook to turn on and customize fonts."
|
|
2378 (require 'font-lock) ; @r{for font-lock-keywords below}
|
|
2379 (make-local-variable 'font-lock-mode-hook) ; @r{don't affect other buffers}
|
|
2380 (add-hook 'font-lock-mode-hook ; @r{set a hook with inline function}
|
|
2381 (function ; @r{modifies font-lock-keywords when}
|
|
2382 (lambda () ; @r{font-lock-mode run}
|
|
2383 (setq font-lock-keywords
|
|
2384 (append my-mh-keywords font-lock-keywords)))))
|
|
2385 (font-lock-mode 1)) ; @r{change the typefaces}
|
|
2386
|
|
2387 (if window-system ; @r{can't do this on @sc{ASCII} terminal}
|
|
2388 (add-hook 'mh-show-mode-hook 'my-mh-show-mode-hook))
|
|
2389 @end group
|
|
2390 @end lisp
|
|
2391
|
|
2392 @vindex @code{mh-show-hook}
|
|
2393
|
|
2394 The second hook, @code{mh-show-hook}, is the last thing called after
|
|
2395 messages are displayed. It's used to affect the behavior of mh-e in
|
|
2396 general or when @code{mh-show-mode-hook} is too early. For example, if
|
|
2397 you wanted to keep mh-e in sync with MH, you could use
|
|
2398 @code{mh-show-hook} as follows:
|
|
2399
|
|
2400 @vindex @code{mh-show-hook}, example
|
|
2401
|
|
2402 @lisp
|
|
2403 (add-hook 'mh-show-hook 'mh-update-sequences)
|
|
2404 @end lisp
|
|
2405
|
|
2406 @vindex @code{mh-show-buffer-mode-line-buffer-id}
|
|
2407 @cindex MH-Show mode
|
|
2408 @cindex modes, MH-Show
|
|
2409
|
|
2410 The function @code{mh-update-sequences} is documented in @ref{Finishing
|
|
2411 Up}. For those who like to modify their mode lines, use
|
|
2412 @code{mh-show-buffer-mode-line-buffer-id} to modify the mode line in the
|
|
2413 MH-Show buffers. Place the two escape strings @samp{%s} and @samp{%d},
|
|
2414 which will display the folder name and the message number, respectively,
|
|
2415 somewhere in the string in that order. The default value of
|
|
2416 @samp{"@{show-%s@} %d"} yields a mode line of
|
|
2417
|
|
2418 @example
|
|
2419 -----@{show-+inbox@} 4 (MH-Show)--Bot----------------------------------
|
|
2420 @end example
|
|
2421
|
|
2422 @node Customizing Moving Around, , Customizing Viewing, Customizing Reading
|
|
2423 @subsection Moving Around
|
|
2424
|
|
2425 @cindex moving between messages
|
|
2426 @cindex MH-Show mode
|
|
2427 @cindex modes, MH-Show
|
|
2428 @cindex MH-Folder mode
|
|
2429 @cindex modes, MH-Folder
|
|
2430 @vindex @code{mh-recenter-summary-p}
|
|
2431
|
|
2432 When you use @kbd{t} (@code{mh-toggle-showing}) to toggle between show
|
|
2433 mode and scan mode, the MH-Show buffer is hidden and the
|
|
2434 MH-Folder buffer is left alone. Setting
|
|
2435 @code{mh-recenter-summary-p} to a non-@code{nil} value causes the toggle to
|
|
2436 display as many scan lines as possible, with the cursor at the middle.
|
|
2437 The effect of @code{mh-recenter-summary-p} is rather useful, but it can
|
|
2438 be annoying on a slow network connection.
|
|
2439
|
|
2440 @node Customizing Sending, Customizing Draft Editing, Customizing Reading, Customizing mh-e
|
|
2441 @section Sending Mail
|
|
2442
|
|
2443 @cindex sending mail
|
|
2444
|
|
2445 You may wish to start off by adding the following useful key bindings to
|
|
2446 your @file{.emacs} file:
|
|
2447
|
|
2448 @lisp
|
|
2449 (global-set-key "\C-xm" 'mh-smail)
|
|
2450 (global-set-key "\C-x4m" 'mh-smail-other-window)
|
|
2451 @end lisp
|
|
2452
|
|
2453 In addition, several variables are useful when sending mail or replying
|
|
2454 to mail. They are summarized in the following table.
|
|
2455
|
|
2456 @table @code
|
|
2457 @item mh-comp-formfile
|
|
2458 Format file for drafts (default: @samp{"components"}).
|
|
2459
|
|
2460 @item mh-repl-formfile
|
|
2461 Format file for replies (default: @samp{"replcomps"}).
|
|
2462
|
|
2463 @item mh-letter-mode-hook
|
|
2464 Functions to run in MH-Letter mode (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2465
|
|
2466 @item mh-compose-letter-function
|
|
2467 Functions to run when starting a new draft (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2468
|
|
2469 @item mh-reply-default-reply-to
|
|
2470 Whom reply goes to (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2471
|
|
2472 @item mh-forward-subject-format
|
|
2473 Format string for forwarded message subject (default: @samp{"%s: %s"}).
|
|
2474
|
|
2475 @item mh-redist-full-contents
|
|
2476 @code{send} requires entire message (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2477
|
|
2478 @item mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers
|
|
2479 Remove these header fields from re-edited draft (default:
|
|
2480 @samp{"^Date:\\| ^Received:\\| ^Message-Id:\\| ^From:\\| ^Sender:\\|
|
|
2481 ^Delivery-Date:\\| ^Return-Path:"}).
|
|
2482 @end table
|
|
2483
|
|
2484 @cindex @code{comp}
|
|
2485 @cindex MH commands, @code{comp}
|
|
2486 @vindex @code{mh-comp-formfile}
|
|
2487 @cindex @file{components}
|
|
2488 @cindex files, @file{components}
|
|
2489 @cindex @code{repl}
|
|
2490 @cindex MH commands, @code{repl}
|
|
2491 @cindex @file{replcomps}
|
|
2492 @cindex files, @file{replcomps}
|
|
2493 @vindex @code{mh-repl-formfile}
|
|
2494
|
|
2495 Since mh-e does not use @code{comp} to create the initial draft, you
|
|
2496 need to set @code{mh-comp-formfile} to the name of your components file
|
|
2497 if it isn't @file{components}. This is the name of the file that
|
|
2498 contains the form for composing messages. If it does not contain an
|
|
2499 absolute pathname, mh-e searches for the file first in your MH directory
|
|
2500 and then in the system MH library directory (such as
|
|
2501 @file{/usr/local/lib/mh}). Replies, on the other hand, are built using
|
|
2502 @code{repl}. You can change the location of the field file from the
|
|
2503 default of @file{replcomps} by modifying @code{mh-repl-formfile}.
|
|
2504
|
|
2505 @vindex @code{mh-letter-mode-hook}
|
|
2506 @cindex @code{repl}
|
|
2507 @cindex MH commands, @code{repl}
|
|
2508 @cindex @file{components}
|
|
2509 @cindex files, @file{components}
|
|
2510
|
|
2511 Two hooks are provided to run commands on your freshly created draft.
|
|
2512 The first hook, @code{mh-letter-mode-hook}, allows you to do some
|
|
2513 processing before editing a letter. For example, you may wish to modify
|
|
2514 the header after @code{repl} has done its work, or you may have a
|
|
2515 complicated @file{components} file and need to tell mh-e where the
|
|
2516 cursor should go. Here's an example of how you would use this hook---all
|
|
2517 of the other hooks are set in this fashion as well.
|
|
2518
|
|
2519 @findex @code{mh-insert-signature}, example
|
|
2520
|
|
2521 @lisp
|
|
2522 @group
|
|
2523 @i{Prepare draft for editing via mh-letter-mode-hook}
|
|
2524
|
|
2525 (defvar letter-mode-init-done nil
|
|
2526 "Non-@code{nil} when one-time mh-e settings have made.")
|
|
2527
|
|
2528 (defun my-mh-letter-mode-hook ()
|
|
2529 "Hook to prepare letter for editing."
|
|
2530 (if (not letter-mode-init-done) ; @r{only need to bind the keys once}
|
|
2531 (progn
|
|
2532 (local-set-key "\C-ctb" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2533 (local-set-key "\C-cti" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2534 (local-set-key "\C-ctf" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2535 (local-set-key "\C-cts" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2536 (local-set-key "\C-ctB" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2537 (local-set-key "\C-ctu" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2538 (local-set-key "\C-ctc" 'add-enriched-text)
|
|
2539 (setq letter-mode-init-done t)))
|
|
2540 (setq fill-prefix " ") ; @r{I find indented text easier to read}
|
|
2541 (save-excursion
|
|
2542 (goto-char (point-max)) ; @r{go to end of message to}
|
|
2543 (mh-insert-signature))) ; @r{insert signature}
|
|
2544
|
|
2545 (add-hook 'mh-letter-mode-hook 'my-mh-letter-mode-hook)
|
|
2546 @end group
|
|
2547 @end lisp
|
|
2548
|
|
2549 The function, @code{add-enriched-text} is defined in the example in
|
|
2550 @ref{Customizing Editing MIME}.
|
|
2551
|
|
2552 @vindex @code{mh-compose-letter-function}
|
|
2553
|
|
2554 The second hook, a function really, is
|
|
2555 @code{mh-compose-letter-function}. Like @code{mh-letter-mode-hook}, it
|
|
2556 is called just before editing a new message; however, it is the last
|
|
2557 function called before you edit your message. The consequence of this
|
|
2558 is that you can write a function to write and send the message for you.
|
|
2559 This function is passed three arguments: the contents of the @samp{To:},
|
|
2560 @samp{Subject:}, and @samp{cc:} header fields.
|
|
2561
|
|
2562 @menu
|
|
2563 * Customizing Replying::
|
|
2564 * Customizing Forwarding::
|
|
2565 * Customizing Redistributing::
|
|
2566 * Customizing Old Drafts::
|
|
2567 @end menu
|
|
2568
|
|
2569 @node Customizing Replying, Customizing Forwarding, Customizing Sending, Customizing Sending
|
|
2570 @subsection Replying to Mail
|
|
2571
|
|
2572 @cindex replying
|
|
2573 @vindex @code{mh-reply-default-reply-to}
|
|
2574
|
|
2575 If you find that most of the time that you specify @kbd{cc} when you
|
|
2576 reply to a message, set @code{mh-reply-default-reply-to} to @samp{cc}.
|
|
2577 This variable is normally set to @code{nil} so that you are prompted for
|
|
2578 the recipient of a reply. It can be set to one of @samp{from},
|
|
2579 @samp{to}, or @samp{cc}; you are then no longer prompted for the
|
|
2580 recipient(s) of your reply.
|
|
2581
|
|
2582 @node Customizing Forwarding, Customizing Redistributing, Customizing Replying, Customizing Sending
|
|
2583 @subsection Forwarding Mail
|
|
2584
|
|
2585 @cindex forwarding
|
|
2586 @vindex @code{mh-forward-subject-format}
|
|
2587
|
|
2588 When forwarding a message, the format of the @samp{Subject:} header
|
|
2589 field can be modified by the variable @code{mh-forward-subject-format}.
|
|
2590 This variable is a string which includes two escapes (@samp{%s}). The
|
|
2591 first @samp{%s} is replaced with the sender of the original message, and
|
|
2592 the second one is replaced with the original @samp{Subject:}. The
|
|
2593 default value of @samp{"%s: %s"} takes a message with the header:
|
|
2594
|
|
2595 @example
|
|
2596 @group
|
|
2597 To: Bill Wohler <wohler@@newt.com>
|
|
2598 Subject: Re: 49er football
|
|
2599 From: Greg DesBrisay <gd@@cellnet.com>
|
|
2600 @end group
|
|
2601 @end example
|
|
2602
|
|
2603 and creates a subject header field of:
|
|
2604
|
|
2605 @example
|
|
2606 Subject: Greg DesBrisay: Re: 49er football
|
|
2607 @end example
|
|
2608
|
|
2609 @node Customizing Redistributing, Customizing Old Drafts, Customizing Forwarding, Customizing Sending
|
|
2610 @subsection Redistributing Your Mail
|
|
2611
|
|
2612 @cindex redistributing
|
|
2613 @vindex @code{mh-redist-full-contents}
|
|
2614 @cindex @code{dist}
|
|
2615 @cindex MH commands, @code{dist}
|
|
2616 @cindex @code{send}
|
|
2617 @cindex MH commands, @code{send}
|
|
2618
|
|
2619 The variable @code{mh-redist-full-contents} must be set to non-@code{nil} if
|
|
2620 @code{dist} requires the whole letter for redistribution, which is the
|
|
2621 case if @code{send} is compiled with the @sc{berk} @footnote{To see which
|
|
2622 options your copy of MH was compiled with, use @kbd{M-x mh-version}
|
|
2623 (@ref{Miscellaneous}).} option (which many people abhor). If you find
|
|
2624 that MH will not allow you to redistribute a message that has been
|
|
2625 redistributed before, this variable should be set to @code{nil}.
|
|
2626
|
|
2627 @node Customizing Old Drafts, , Customizing Redistributing, Customizing Sending
|
|
2628 @subsection Editing Old Drafts and Bounced Messages
|
|
2629
|
|
2630 @cindex re-editing drafts
|
|
2631 @vindex @code{mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers}
|
|
2632
|
|
2633 The header fields specified by @code{mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers} are
|
|
2634 removed from an old draft that has been recreated with @kbd{M-e}
|
|
2635 (@code{mh-extract-rejected-mail}) or @kbd{M-a} (@code{mh-edit-again}).
|
|
2636 If when you edit an old draft with these commands you find that there
|
|
2637 are header fields that you don't want included, you can append them to
|
|
2638 this variable. For example,
|
|
2639
|
|
2640 @vindex @code{mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers}, example
|
|
2641
|
|
2642 @lisp
|
|
2643 (setq mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers
|
|
2644 (concat mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers "\\|^Some-Field:"))
|
|
2645 @end lisp
|
|
2646
|
|
2647 @cindex regular expressions
|
|
2648
|
|
2649 This appends the regular expression @samp{\\|^Some-Field:} to the
|
|
2650 variable (@pxref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The
|
|
2651 GNU Emacs Manual}). The @samp{\\|} means @emph{or}, and the @samp{^}
|
|
2652 (caret) matches the beginning of the line. This is done to be very
|
|
2653 specific about which fields match. The literal @samp{:} is appended for
|
|
2654 the same reason.
|
|
2655
|
|
2656 @node Customizing Draft Editing, Customizing Moving Mail, Customizing Sending, Customizing mh-e
|
|
2657 @section Editing a Draft
|
|
2658
|
|
2659 @cindex editing draft
|
|
2660
|
|
2661 There are several variables used during the draft editing phase.
|
|
2662 Examples include changing the name of the file that holds your signature
|
|
2663 or telling mh-e about new multimedia types. They are:
|
|
2664
|
|
2665 @table @code
|
|
2666 @item mh-yank-from-start-of-msg
|
|
2667 How to yank when region not set (default: @code{t}).
|
|
2668
|
|
2669 @item mh-ins-buf-prefix
|
|
2670 Indent for yanked messages (default: @samp{"> "}).
|
|
2671
|
|
2672 @item mail-citation-hook
|
|
2673 Functions to run on yanked messages (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2674
|
|
2675 @item mh-delete-yanked-msg-window
|
|
2676 Delete message window on yank (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2677
|
|
2678 @c Need the @* because otherwise TeX fills it wrong and complains
|
|
2679 @c about overfull hbox.
|
|
2680 @item mh-mime-content-types
|
|
2681 List of valid content types (default: @samp{'(("text/plain")@*
|
|
2682 ("text/richtext") ("multipart/mixed") ("multipart/alternative")@*
|
|
2683 ("multipart/digest") ("multipart/parallel") ("message/rfc822")@*
|
|
2684 ("message/partial") ("message/external-body")@*
|
|
2685 ("application/octet-stream") ("application/postscript")@*
|
|
2686 ("image/jpeg") ("image/gif") ("audio/basic") ("video/mpeg"))}).
|
|
2687
|
|
2688 @item mh-mhn-args
|
|
2689 Additional arguments for @code{mhn} (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2690
|
|
2691 @item mh-signature-file-name
|
|
2692 File containing signature (default: @samp{"~/.signature"}).
|
|
2693
|
|
2694 @item mh-before-send-letter-hook
|
|
2695 Functions to run before sending draft (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2696
|
|
2697 @item mh-send-prog
|
|
2698 MH program used to send messages (default: @samp{"send"}).
|
|
2699 @end table
|
|
2700
|
|
2701 @menu
|
|
2702 * Customizing Editing Textual::
|
|
2703 * Customizing Editing MIME::
|
|
2704 * Customizing Sending Message::
|
|
2705 @end menu
|
|
2706
|
|
2707 @node Customizing Editing Textual, Customizing Editing MIME, Customizing Draft Editing, Customizing Draft Editing
|
|
2708 @subsection Editing Textual Messages
|
|
2709
|
|
2710 The following two sections include variables that customize the way you
|
|
2711 edit a draft. The discussion here applies to editing multimedia
|
|
2712 messages as well.
|
|
2713
|
|
2714 @menu
|
|
2715 * Customizing Inserting Letter::
|
|
2716 * Customizing Signature::
|
|
2717 @end menu
|
|
2718
|
|
2719 @node Customizing Inserting Letter, Customizing Signature, Customizing Editing Textual, Customizing Editing Textual
|
|
2720 @subsubsection Inserting letter to which you're replying
|
|
2721
|
|
2722 @cindex inserting messages
|
|
2723 @vindex @code{mh-yank-from-start-of-msg}
|
|
2724 @vindex @code{mh-ins-buf-prefix}
|
|
2725 @vindex @code{mail-citation-hook}
|
|
2726 @vindex @code{mh-ins-buf-prefix}
|
|
2727 @vindex @code{mh-delete-yanked-msg-window}
|
|
2728
|
|
2729 To control how much of the message to which you are replying is yanked
|
|
2730 by @kbd{C-c C-y} (@code{mh-yank-cur-msg}) into your reply, modify
|
|
2731 @code{mh-yank-from-start-of-msg}. The default value of @code{t} means
|
|
2732 that the entire message is copied. If it is set to @code{'body} (don't
|
|
2733 forget the apostrophe), then only the message body is copied. If it is
|
|
2734 set to @code{nil}, only the part of the message following point (the
|
|
2735 current cursor position in the message's buffer) is copied. In any
|
|
2736 case, this variable is ignored if a region is set in the message you are
|
|
2737 replying to. The string contained in @code{mh-ins-buf-prefix} is
|
|
2738 inserted before each line of a message that is inserted into a draft
|
|
2739 with @kbd{C-c C-y} (@code{mh-yank-cur-msg}). I suggest that you not
|
|
2740 modify this variable. The default value of @samp{"> "} is the default
|
|
2741 string for many mailers and news readers: messages are far easier to
|
|
2742 read if several included messages have all been indented by the same
|
|
2743 string. The variable @code{mail-citation-hook} is @code{nil} by
|
|
2744 default, which means that when a message is inserted into the letter,
|
|
2745 each line is prefixed by @code{mh-ins-buf-prefix}. Otherwise, it can be
|
|
2746 set to a function that modifies an included
|
|
2747 @cindex Emacs, packages, supercite
|
|
2748 citation.
|
|
2749 @c Footnotes are fragile; hence the redundancy.
|
|
2750 @c TeX not inserting a line break; hence the @*
|
|
2751 @ifclear html
|
|
2752 @footnote{@emph{Supercite} is an example of a full-bodied, full-featured
|
|
2753 citation package. It is in Emacs versions 19.15 and later, and can be
|
|
2754 found via anonymous @code{ftp} on @samp{archive.cis.ohio-state.edu} in
|
|
2755 @* @file{/pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/sc3.1.tar.Z}}
|
|
2756 @end ifclear
|
|
2757 @ifset html
|
|
2758 @footnote{@emph{Supercite} is an example of a full-bodied,
|
|
2759 full-featured citation package. It is in Emacs versions 19.15 and
|
|
2760 later, and its @sc{url} is @*
|
|
2761 @file{<A HREF="ftp://archive.cis.ohio-state.edu/pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/sc3.1.tar.Z">ftp://archive.cis.ohio-state.edu/pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/sc3.1.tar.Z</A>}}
|
|
2762 @end ifset
|
|
2763 If you like to yank all the text from the message you're replying to in
|
|
2764 one go, set @code{mh-delete-yanked-msg-window} to non-@code{nil} to delete
|
|
2765 the window containing the original message after yanking it to make more
|
|
2766 room on your screen for your reply.
|
|
2767
|
|
2768 @node Customizing Signature, , Customizing Inserting Letter, Customizing Editing Textual
|
|
2769 @subsubsection Inserting your signature
|
|
2770
|
|
2771 @cindex inserting signature
|
|
2772 @cindex signature
|
|
2773 @vindex @code{mh-signature-file-name}
|
|
2774 @cindex @file{.signature}
|
|
2775 @cindex files, @file{.signature}
|
|
2776
|
|
2777 You can change the name of the file inserted with @kbd{C-c C-s}
|
|
2778 (@code{mh-insert-signature}) by changing @code{mh-signature-file-name}
|
|
2779 (default: @file{"~/.signature"}).
|
|
2780
|
|
2781 @node Customizing Editing MIME, Customizing Sending Message, Customizing Editing Textual, Customizing Draft Editing
|
|
2782 @subsection Editing Multimedia Messages
|
|
2783
|
|
2784 @cindex MIME
|
|
2785 @cindex multimedia mail
|
|
2786 @vindex @code{mh-mime-content-types}
|
|
2787
|
|
2788 The variable @code{mh-mime-content-types} contains a list of the
|
|
2789 currently valid content types. They are listed in the table in
|
|
2790 @ref{Customizing Draft Editing}. If you encounter a new content type,
|
|
2791 you can add it like this:
|
|
2792
|
|
2793 @vindex @code{mh-mime-content-types}, example
|
|
2794
|
|
2795 @lisp
|
|
2796 (setq mh-mime-content-types (append mh-mime-content-types
|
|
2797 '(("@var{new/type}"))))
|
|
2798 @end lisp
|
|
2799
|
|
2800 Emacs macros can be used to insert enriched text directives like
|
|
2801 @samp{<bold>}. The following code will make, for example, @kbd{C-c t
|
|
2802 b} insert the @samp{<bold>} directive.
|
|
2803
|
|
2804 @lisp
|
|
2805 @group
|
|
2806 @i{Emacs macros for entering enriched text}
|
|
2807
|
|
2808 (defvar enriched-text-types '(("b" . "bold") ("i" . "italic") ("f" . "fixed")
|
|
2809 ("s" . "smaller") ("B" . "bigger")
|
|
2810 ("u" . "underline") ("c" . "center"))
|
|
2811 "Alist of (final-character . directive) choices for add-enriched-text.
|
|
2812 Additional types can be found in RFC 1563.")
|
|
2813
|
|
2814 (defun add-enriched-text (begin end)
|
|
2815 "Add enriched text directives around region.
|
|
2816 The directive used comes from the list enriched-text-types and is
|
|
2817 specified by the last keystroke of the command. When called from Lisp,
|
|
2818 arguments are BEGIN and END@."
|
|
2819 (interactive "r")
|
|
2820 ;; @r{Set type to the directive indicated by the last keystroke.}
|
|
2821 (let ((type (cdr (assoc (char-to-string (logior last-input-char ?@w{`}))
|
|
2822 enriched-text-types))))
|
|
2823 (save-restriction ; @r{restores state from narrow-to-region}
|
|
2824 (narrow-to-region begin end) ; @r{narrow view to region}
|
|
2825 (goto-char (point-min)) ; @r{move to beginning of text}
|
|
2826 (insert "<" type ">") ; @r{insert beginning directive}
|
|
2827 (goto-char (point-max)) ; @r{move to end of text}
|
|
2828 (insert "</" type ">")))) ; @r{insert terminating directive}
|
|
2829 @end group
|
|
2830 @end lisp
|
|
2831
|
|
2832 To use the function @code{add-enriched-text}, first create keybindings
|
|
2833 for it (@pxref{Customizing Sending}). Then, set the mark with
|
|
2834 @kbd{C-@@} or @kbd{C-SPC}, type in the text to be highlighted, and type
|
|
2835 @kbd{C-c t b}. This adds @samp{<bold>} where you set the mark and
|
|
2836 adds @samp{</bold>} at the location of your cursor, giving you something
|
|
2837 like: @samp{You should be <bold>very</bold>}. You may also be
|
|
2838 interested in investigating @code{sgml-mode}.
|
|
2839
|
|
2840 @menu
|
|
2841 * Customizing Sending MIME::
|
|
2842 @end menu
|
|
2843
|
|
2844 @node Customizing Sending MIME, , Customizing Editing MIME, Customizing Editing MIME
|
|
2845 @subsubsection Readying multimedia messages for sending
|
|
2846
|
|
2847 @vindex @code{mh-mhn-args}
|
|
2848
|
|
2849 If you wish to pass additional arguments to @code{mhn} to affect how it
|
|
2850 builds your message, use the variable @code{mh-mhn-args}. For example,
|
|
2851 you can build a consistency check into the message by setting
|
|
2852 @code{mh-mhn-args} to @code{-check}. The recipient of your message can
|
|
2853 then run @code{mhn -check} on the message---@code{mhn} will complain if
|
|
2854 the message has been corrupted on the way. The @kbd{C-c C-e}
|
|
2855 (@code{mh-mhn-edit}) command only consults this variable when given a
|
|
2856 prefix argument.
|
|
2857
|
|
2858 @node Customizing Sending Message, , Customizing Editing MIME, Customizing Draft Editing
|
|
2859 @subsection Sending a Message
|
|
2860
|
|
2861 @cindex sending mail
|
|
2862 @cindex spell check
|
|
2863 @vindex @code{mh-before-send-letter-hook}
|
|
2864
|
|
2865 If you want to check your spelling in your message before sending, use
|
|
2866 @code{mh-before-send-letter-hook} like this:
|
|
2867
|
|
2868 @i{Spell-check message via mh-before-send-letter-hook}
|
|
2869
|
|
2870 @vindex @code{mh-before-send-letter-hook}, example
|
|
2871
|
|
2872 @lisp
|
|
2873 (add-hook 'mh-before-send-letter-hook 'ispell-message)
|
|
2874 @end lisp
|
|
2875
|
|
2876 @cindex @code{send}
|
|
2877 @cindex MH commands, @code{send}
|
|
2878 @vindex @code{mh-send-prog}
|
|
2879
|
|
2880 In case the MH @code{send} program is installed under a different name,
|
|
2881 use @code{mh-send-prog} to tell mh-e the name.
|
|
2882
|
|
2883 @node Customizing Moving Mail, Customizing Searching, Customizing Draft Editing, Customizing mh-e
|
|
2884 @section Moving Your Mail Around
|
|
2885
|
|
2886 @cindex processing mail
|
|
2887
|
|
2888 If you change the name of some of the MH programs or have your own
|
|
2889 printing programs, the following variables can help you.
|
|
2890 They are described in detail in the subsequent sections.
|
|
2891
|
|
2892 @table @code
|
|
2893 @item mh-inc-prog
|
|
2894 Program to incorporate mail (default: @samp{"inc"}).
|
|
2895
|
|
2896 @item mh-inc-folder-hook
|
|
2897 Functions to run when incorporating mail (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2898
|
|
2899 @item mh-delete-msg-hook
|
|
2900 Functions to run when deleting messages (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2901
|
|
2902 @item mh-print-background
|
|
2903 Print in foreground or background (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2904
|
|
2905 @item mh-lpr-command-format
|
|
2906 Command used to print (default: @samp{"lpr -J '%s'"}).
|
|
2907
|
|
2908 @item mh-default-folder-for-message-function
|
|
2909 Function to generate a default folder (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2910
|
|
2911 @item mh-auto-folder-collect
|
|
2912 Collect folder names in background at startup (default: @code{t}).
|
|
2913
|
|
2914 @item mh-recursive-folders
|
|
2915 Collect nested folders (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2916
|
|
2917 @item mh-refile-msg-hook
|
|
2918 Functions to run when refiling message (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2919
|
|
2920 @item mh-store-default-directory
|
|
2921 Default directory for storing files created by @code{uuencode} or @code{shar}
|
|
2922 (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2923
|
|
2924 @item mh-sortm-args
|
|
2925 Additional arguments for @code{sortm} (default: @code{nil}).
|
|
2926
|
|
2927 @item mh-scan-prog
|
|
2928 Program to scan messages (default: @samp{"scan"}).
|
|
2929
|
|
2930 @item mh-before-quit-hook
|
|
2931 Functions to run before quitting (default: @code{nil}). See also
|
|
2932 @code{mh-quit-hook}.
|
|
2933
|
|
2934 @item mh-quit-hook
|
|
2935 Functions to run after quitting (default: @code{nil}). See also
|
|
2936 @code{mh-before-quit-hook}.
|
|
2937 @end table
|
|
2938
|
|
2939 @menu
|
|
2940 * Customizing Incorporating::
|
|
2941 * Customizing Deleting::
|
|
2942 * Customizing Organizing::
|
|
2943 * Customizing Printing::
|
|
2944 * Customizing Files and Pipes::
|
|
2945 * Customizing Finishing Up::
|
|
2946 @end menu
|
|
2947
|
|
2948 @node Customizing Incorporating, Customizing Deleting, Customizing Moving Mail, Customizing Moving Mail
|
|
2949 @subsection Incorporating Your Mail
|
|
2950
|
|
2951 @cindex incorporating
|
|
2952 @vindex @code{mh-inc-prog}
|
|
2953 @cindex @code{inc}
|
|
2954 @cindex MH commands, @code{inc}
|
|
2955 @vindex @code{mh-progs}
|
|
2956 @vindex @code{mh-scan-prog}
|
|
2957 @vindex @code{mh-inc-folder-hook}
|
|
2958
|
|
2959 The name of the program that incorporates new mail is stored in
|
|
2960 @code{mh-inc-prog}; it is @samp{"inc"} by default. This program
|
|
2961 generates a one-line summary for each of the new messages. Unless it is
|
|
2962 an absolute pathname, the file is assumed to be in the @code{mh-progs}
|
|
2963 directory. You may also link a file to @code{inc} that uses a different
|
|
2964 format (see @code{mh-profile}(5)). You'll then need to modify several
|
|
2965 variables appropriately; see @code{mh-scan-prog} below. You can set the
|
|
2966 hook @code{mh-inc-folder-hook}, which is called after new mail is
|
|
2967 incorporated by the @kbd{i} (@code{mh-inc-folder}) command. A good use
|
|
2968 of this hook is to rescan the whole folder either after running @kbd{M-x
|
|
2969 mh-rmail} the first time or when you've changed the message numbers from
|
|
2970 outside of mh-e.
|
|
2971
|
|
2972 @findex @code{mh-execute-commands}
|
|
2973 @findex @code{mh-rescan-folder}, example
|
|
2974 @findex @code{mh-show}, example
|
|
2975 @vindex @code{mh-inc-folder-hook}, example
|
|
2976
|
|
2977 @lisp
|
|
2978 @group
|
|
2979 @i{Rescan folder after incorporating new mail via mh-inc-folder-hook}
|
|
2980
|
|
2981 (defun my-mh-inc-folder-hook ()
|
|
2982 "Hook to rescan folder after incorporating mail."
|
|
2983 (if (buffer-modified-p) ; @r{if outstanding refiles and deletes,}
|
|
2984 (mh-execute-commands)) ; @r{carry them out}
|
|
2985 (mh-rescan-folder) ; @r{synchronize with +inbox}
|
|
2986 (mh-show)) ; @r{show the current message}
|
|
2987
|
|
2988 (add-hook 'mh-inc-folder-hook 'my-mh-inc-folder-hook)
|
|
2989 @end group
|
|
2990 @end lisp
|
|
2991
|
|
2992 @node Customizing Deleting, Customizing Organizing, Customizing Incorporating, Customizing Moving Mail
|
|
2993 @subsection Deleting Your Mail
|
|
2994
|
|
2995 @cindex deleting
|
|
2996 @vindex @code{mh-delete-msg-hook}
|
|
2997
|
|
2998 The hook @code{mh-delete-msg-hook} is called after you mark a message
|
|
2999 for deletion. For example, the current maintainer of mh-e used this
|
|
3000 once when he kept statistics on his mail usage.
|
|
3001
|
|
3002 @node Customizing Organizing, Customizing Printing, Customizing Deleting, Customizing Moving Mail
|
|
3003 @subsection Organizing Your Mail with Folders
|
|
3004
|
|
3005 @cindex using folders
|
|
3006 @vindex @code{mh-recursive-folders}
|
|
3007 @vindex @code{mh-auto-folder-collect}
|
|
3008
|
|
3009 By default, operations on folders work only one level at a time. Set
|
|
3010 @code{mh-recursive-folders} to non-@code{nil} to operate on all folders.
|
|
3011 This mostly means that you'll be able to see all your folders when you
|
|
3012 press @key{TAB} when prompted for a folder name. The variable
|
|
3013 @code{mh-auto-folder-collect} is normally turned on to generate a list
|
|
3014 of folder names in the background as soon as mh-e is loaded. Otherwise,
|
|
3015 the list is generated when you need a folder name the first time (as
|
|
3016 with @kbd{o} (@code{mh-refile-msg})). If you have a lot of folders and
|
|
3017 you have @code{mh-recursive-folders} set, this could take a while, which
|
|
3018 is why it's nice to do the folder collection in the background.
|
|
3019
|
|
3020 @vindex @code{mh-default-folder-for-message-function}
|
|
3021 @findex @code{mh-refile-msg}
|
|
3022 @findex @code{mh-to-fcc}
|
|
3023 @cindex @file{.emacs}
|
|
3024 @cindex files, @file{.emacs}
|
|
3025
|
|
3026 The function @code{mh-default-folder-for-message-function} is used by
|
|
3027 @kbd{o} (@code{mh-refile-msg}) and @kbd{C-c C-f C-f} (@code{mh-to-fcc})
|
|
3028 to generate a default folder. The generated folder name should be a
|
|
3029 string with a @samp{+} before it. For each of my correspondents, I use the
|
|
3030 same name for both an alias and a folder. So, I wrote a function that
|
|
3031 takes the address in the @samp{From:} header field, finds it in my alias
|
|
3032 file, and returns the alias, which is used as a default folder name.
|
|
3033 This is the most complicated example given here, and it demonstrates
|
|
3034 several features of Emacs Lisp programming. You should be able to drop
|
|
3035 this into @file{~/.emacs}, however. If you use this to store messages
|
|
3036 in a subfolder of your Mail directory, you can modify the line that
|
|
3037 starts @samp{(format +%s...} and insert your subfolder after the folder
|
|
3038 symbol @samp{+}.
|
|
3039 @c Note for me: if I insert a new version, don't forget to remove the
|
|
3040 @c "a/" from the folder name.
|
|
3041
|
|
3042 @iftex
|
|
3043 @filbreak
|
|
3044 @end iftex
|
|
3045
|
|
3046 @vindex @code{mh-default-folder-for-message-function}, example
|
|
3047 @vindex @code{mh-user-path}, example
|
|
3048
|
|
3049 @lisp
|
|
3050 @group
|
|
3051 @i{Creating useful default folder for refiling via mh-default-folder-for-message-function}
|
|
3052
|
|
3053 (defun my-mh-folder-from-address ()
|
|
3054 "Determine folder name from address.
|
|
3055 Takes the address in the From: header field, and returns its corresponding
|
|
3056 alias from the user's personal aliases file. Returns @code{nil} if the address
|
|
3057 was not found."
|
|
3058 (require 'rfc822) ; @r{for the rfc822 functions}
|
|
3059 (search-forward-regexp "^From: \\(.*\\)") ; @r{grab header field contents}
|
|
3060 (save-excursion ; @r{save state}
|
|
3061 (let ((addr (car (rfc822-addresses ; @r{get address}
|
|
3062 (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1)
|
|
3063 (match-end 1)))))
|
|
3064 (buffer (get-buffer-create " *temp*")) ; @r{set local variables}
|
|
3065 folder)
|
|
3066 (set-buffer buffer) ; @r{jump to temporary buffer}
|
|
3067 (unwind-protect ; @r{run kill-buffer when done}
|
|
3068 (progn ; @r{function grouping construct}
|
|
3069 (insert-file-contents (expand-file-name "aliases"
|
|
3070 mh-user-path))
|
|
3071 (goto-char (point-min)) ; @r{grab aliases file and go to start}
|
|
3072 (setq folder
|
|
3073 ;; @r{Search for the given address, even commented-out}
|
|
3074 ;; @r{addresses are found!}
|
|
3075 ;; @r{The function search-forward-regexp sets values that are}
|
|
3076 ;; @r{later used by match-beginning and match-end.}
|
|
3077 (if (search-forward-regexp (format "^;*\\(.*\\):.*%s"
|
|
3078 addr) nil t)
|
|
3079 ;; @r{NOTE WELL: this is what the return value looks like.}
|
|
3080 ;; @r{You can modify the format string to match your own}
|
|
3081 ;; @r{Mail hierarchy.}
|
|
3082 (format "+%s" (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1)
|
|
3083 (match-end 1))))))
|
|
3084 (kill-buffer buffer)) ; @r{get rid of our temporary buffer}
|
|
3085 folder))) ; @r{function's return value}
|
|
3086
|
|
3087 (setq mh-default-folder-for-message-function 'my-mh-folder-from-address)
|
|
3088 @end group
|
|
3089 @end lisp
|
|
3090
|
|
3091 @vindex @code{mh-refile-msg-hook}
|
|
3092
|
|
3093 The hook @code{mh-refile-msg-hook} is called after a message is marked
|
|
3094 to be refiled.
|
|
3095
|
|
3096 @vindex @code{mh-sortm-args}
|
|
3097 @cindex @code{sortm}
|
|
3098 @cindex MH commands, @code{sortm}
|
|
3099 @findex @code{mh-sort-folder}
|
|
3100 @cindex MH profile components, @code{sortm}
|
|
3101 @cindex @file{.mh_profile}
|
|
3102 @cindex files, @file{.mh_profile}
|
|
3103
|
|
3104 The variable @code{mh-sortm-args} holds extra arguments to pass on to
|
|
3105 the @code{sortm} command. Note: this variable is only consulted when a
|
|
3106 prefix argument is given to @kbd{M-x mh-sort-folder}. It is used to
|
|
3107 override any arguments given in a @code{sortm:} entry in your MH profile
|
|
3108 (@file{~/.mh_profile}).
|
|
3109
|
|
3110 @menu
|
|
3111 * Customizing Scan Line Formats::
|
|
3112 @end menu
|
|
3113
|
|
3114 @node Customizing Scan Line Formats, , Customizing Organizing, Customizing Organizing
|
|
3115 @subsubsection Scan line formatting
|
|
3116
|
|
3117 @vindex @code{mh-scan-prog}
|
|
3118 @cindex @code{scan}
|
|
3119 @cindex MH commands, @code{scan}
|
|
3120 @vindex @code{mh-progs}
|
|
3121
|
|
3122 The name of the program that generates a listing of one line per message
|
|
3123 is held in @code{mh-scan-prog} (default: @samp{"scan"}). Unless this
|
|
3124 variable contains an absolute pathname, it is assumed to be in the
|
|
3125 @code{mh-progs} directory. You may link another program to @code{scan}
|
|
3126 (see @code{mh-profile}(5)) to produce a different type of listing.
|
|
3127
|
|
3128 If you change the format of the scan lines you'll need to tell mh-e how
|
|
3129 to parse the new format. As you see, quite a lot of variables are
|
|
3130 involved to do that. The first variable has to do with pruning out
|
|
3131 garbage.
|
|
3132
|
|
3133 @table @code
|
|
3134 @item mh-valid-scan-line
|
|
3135 @vindex @code{mh-valid-scan-line}
|
|
3136 @cindex @code{inc}
|
|
3137 @cindex MH commands, @code{inc}
|
|
3138 @cindex @code{scan}
|
|
3139 @cindex MH commands, @code{scan}
|
|
3140 This regular expression describes a valid scan line. This is used to
|
|
3141 eliminate error messages that are occasionally produced by @code{inc} or
|
|
3142 @code{scan} (default: @samp{"^ *[0-9]"}).
|
|
3143 @end table
|
|
3144
|
|
3145 Next, two variables control how the message numbers are parsed.
|
|
3146
|
|
3147 @table @code
|
|
3148
|
|
3149 @item mh-msg-number-regexp
|
|
3150 @vindex @code{mh-msg-number-regexp}
|
|
3151 This regular expression is used to extract the message number from a
|
|
3152 scan line. Note that the message number must be placed in quoted
|
|
3153 parentheses, (\\(...\\)), as in the default of @w{@samp{"^
|
|
3154 *\\([0-9]+\\)"}}.
|
|
3155
|
|
3156 @item mh-msg-search-regexp
|
|
3157 @vindex @code{mh-msg-search-regexp}
|
|
3158 Given a message number (which is inserted in @samp{%d}), this regular
|
|
3159 expression will match the scan line that it represents (default:
|
|
3160 @samp{"^[^0-9]*%d[^0-9]"}).
|
|
3161 @end table
|
|
3162
|
|
3163 Finally, there are a slew of variables that control how mh-e marks up
|
|
3164 the scan lines.
|
|
3165
|
|
3166 @table @code
|
|
3167 @item mh-cmd-note
|
|
3168 @vindex @code{mh-cmd-note}
|
|
3169 Number of characters to skip over before inserting notation (default:
|
|
3170 4). Note how it relates to the following regular expressions.
|
|
3171
|
|
3172 @item mh-deleted-msg-regexp
|
|
3173 @vindex @code{mh-deleted-msg-regexp}
|
|
3174 This regular expression describes deleted messages (default:
|
|
3175 @samp{"^....D"}). See also @code{mh-note-deleted}.
|
|
3176
|
|
3177 @item mh-refiled-msg-regexp
|
|
3178 @vindex @code{mh-refiled-msg-regexp}
|
|
3179 This regular expression describes refiled messages (default:
|
|
3180 @samp{"^....\\^"}). See also @code{mh-note-refiled}.
|
|
3181
|
|
3182 @item mh-cur-scan-msg-regexp
|
|
3183 @vindex @code{mh-cur-scan-msg-regexp}
|
|
3184 This regular expression matches the current message (default:
|
|
3185 @samp{"^....\\+"}). See also @code{mh-note-cur}.
|
|
3186
|
|
3187 @item mh-good-msg-regexp
|
|
3188 @vindex @code{mh-good-msg-regexp}
|
|
3189 This regular expression describes which messages should be shown when
|
|
3190 mh-e goes to the next or previous message. Normally, deleted or refiled
|
|
3191 messages are skipped over (default: @samp{"^....[^D^]"}).
|
|
3192
|
|
3193 @item mh-note-deleted
|
|
3194 @vindex @code{mh-note-deleted}
|
|
3195 Messages that have been deleted to are marked by this string (default:
|
|
3196 @samp{"D"}). See also @code{mh-deleted-msg-regexp}.
|
|
3197
|
|
3198 @item mh-note-refiled
|
|
3199 @vindex @code{mh-note-refiled}
|
|
3200 Messages that have been refiled are marked by this string (default:
|
|
3201 @samp{"^"}). See also @code{mh-refiled-msg-regexp}.
|
|
3202
|
|
3203 @item mh-note-copied
|
|
3204 @vindex @code{mh-note-copied}
|
|
3205 Messages that have been copied are marked by this string (default:
|
|
3206 @samp{"C"}).
|
|
3207
|
|
3208 @item mh-note-cur
|
|
3209 @vindex @code{mh-note-cur}
|
|
3210 The current message (in MH, not in mh-e) is marked by this string
|
|
3211 (default: @samp{"+"}). See also @code{mh-cur-scan-msg-regexp}.
|
|
3212
|
|
3213 @item mh-note-repl
|
|
3214 @vindex @code{mh-note-repl}
|
|
3215 Messages that have been replied to are marked by this string (default:
|
|
3216 @samp{"-"}).
|
|
3217
|
|
3218 @item mh-note-forw
|
|
3219 @vindex @code{mh-note-forw}
|
|
3220 Messages that have been forwarded are marked by this string (default:
|
|
3221 @samp{"F"}).
|
|
3222
|
|
3223 @item mh-note-dist
|
|
3224 @vindex @code{mh-note-dist}
|
|
3225 Messages that have been redistributed are marked by this string
|
|
3226 (default: @samp{"R"}).
|
|
3227
|
|
3228 @item mh-note-printed
|
|
3229 @vindex @code{mh-note-printed}
|
|
3230 Messages that have been printed are marked by this string (default:
|
|
3231 @samp{"P"}).
|
|
3232
|
|
3233 @item mh-note-seq
|
|
3234 @vindex @code{mh-note-seq}
|
|
3235 Messages in a sequence are marked by this string (default: @samp{"%"}).
|
|
3236 @end table
|
|
3237
|
|
3238 @node Customizing Printing, Customizing Files and Pipes, Customizing Organizing, Customizing Moving Mail
|
|
3239 @subsection Printing Your Mail
|
|
3240
|
|
3241 @cindex printing
|
|
3242 @vindex @code{mh-print-background}
|
|
3243 @vindex @code{mh-lpr-command-format}
|
|
3244 @cindex @code{lpr}
|
|
3245 @cindex Unix commands, @code{lpr}
|
|
3246
|
|
3247 Normally messages are printed in the foreground. If this is slow on
|
|
3248 your system, you may elect to set @code{mh-print-background} to
|
|
3249 non-@code{nil} to print in the background. If you do this, do not delete
|
|
3250 the message until it is printed or else the output may be truncated.
|
|
3251 The variable @code{mh-lpr-command-format} controls how the printing is
|
|
3252 actually done. The string can contain one escape, @samp{%s}, which is
|
|
3253 filled with the name of the folder and the message number and is useful
|
|
3254 for print job names. As an example, the default is @samp{"lpr -J
|
|
3255 '%s'"}.
|
|
3256
|
|
3257 @node Customizing Files and Pipes, Customizing Finishing Up, Customizing Printing, Customizing Moving Mail
|
|
3258 @subsection Files and Pipes
|
|
3259
|
|
3260 @cindex using files
|
|
3261 @cindex using pipes
|
|
3262 @findex @code{mh-store-msg}
|
|
3263 @vindex @code{mh-store-default-directory}
|
|
3264
|
|
3265 The initial directory for the @code{mh-store-msg} command is held in
|
|
3266 @code{mh-store-default-directory}. Since I almost always run
|
|
3267 @code{mh-store-msg} on sources, I set it to my personal source directory
|
|
3268 like this:
|
|
3269
|
|
3270 @vindex @code{mh-store-default-directory}, example
|
|
3271
|
|
3272 @lisp
|
|
3273 (setq mh-store-default-directory (expand-file-name "~/src/"))
|
|
3274 @end lisp
|
|
3275
|
|
3276 @findex @code{mh-store-buffer}
|
|
3277 @cindex @code{uuencode}
|
|
3278 @cindex Unix commands, @code{uuencode}
|
|
3279 @cindex @code{shar}
|
|
3280 @cindex Unix commands, @code{shar}
|
|
3281
|
|
3282 Subsequent incarnations of @code{mh-store-msg} offer the last directory
|
|
3283 used as the default. By the way, @code{mh-store-msg} calls the Emacs
|
|
3284 Lisp function @code{mh-store-buffer}. I mention this because you can use
|
|
3285 it directly if you're editing a buffer that contains a file that has
|
|
3286 been run through @code{uuencode} or @code{shar}. For example, you can
|
|
3287 extract the contents of the current buffer in your home directory by
|
|
3288 typing @kbd{M-x mh-store-buffer @key{RET} ~ @key{RET}}.
|
|
3289
|
|
3290 @node Customizing Finishing Up, , Customizing Files and Pipes, Customizing Moving Mail
|
|
3291 @subsection Finishing Up
|
|
3292
|
|
3293 @cindex quitting
|
|
3294 @vindex @code{mh-before-quit-hook}
|
|
3295 @vindex @code{mh-quit-hook}
|
|
3296 @findex @code{mh-execute-commands}
|
|
3297
|
|
3298 The two variables @code{mh-before-quit-hook} and @code{mh-quit-hook} are
|
|
3299 called by @kbd{q} (@code{mh-quit}). The former one is called before the
|
|
3300 quit occurs, so you might use it to perform any mh-e operations; you
|
|
3301 could perform some query and abort the quit or call
|
|
3302 @code{mh-execute-commands}, for example. The latter is not run in an
|
|
3303 mh-e context, so you might use it to modify the window setup.
|
|
3304
|
|
3305 @node Customizing Searching, , Customizing Moving Mail, Customizing mh-e
|
|
3306 @section Searching Through Messages
|
|
3307 @cindex searching
|
|
3308
|
|
3309 @vindex @code{mh-pick-mode-hook}
|
|
3310 @vindex @code{mh-partial-folder-mode-line-annotation}
|
|
3311
|
|
3312 If you find that you do the same thing over and over when editing the
|
|
3313 search template, you may wish to bind some shortcuts to keys. This can
|
|
3314 be done with the variable @code{mh-pick-mode-hook}, which is called when
|
|
3315 @kbd{M-s} (@code{mh-search-folder}) is run on a new pattern.
|
|
3316
|
|
3317 The string
|
|
3318 @code{mh-partial-folder-mode-line-annotation} is used to annotate the
|
|
3319 mode line when only a portion of the folder is shown. For example, this
|
|
3320 will be displayed after running @kbd{M-s} (@code{mh-search-folder}) to
|
|
3321 list messages based on some search criteria (see @ref{Searching}). The
|
|
3322 default annotation of @samp{"select"} yields a mode line that looks
|
|
3323 like:
|
|
3324
|
|
3325 @example
|
|
3326 --%%-@{+inbox/select@} 2 msgs (2-3) (MH-Folder)--All-----------------
|
|
3327 @end example
|
|
3328
|
|
3329 @node Odds and Ends, History, Customizing mh-e, Top
|
|
3330 @appendix Odds and Ends
|
|
3331
|
|
3332 This appendix covers a few topics that don't fit elsewhere. Here I tell
|
|
3333 you how to report bugs and how to get on the mh-e mailing list. I also
|
|
3334 point out some additional sources of information.
|
|
3335
|
|
3336 @menu
|
|
3337 * Bug Reports::
|
|
3338 * Mailing List::
|
|
3339 * MH FAQ::
|
|
3340 * Getting mh-e::
|
|
3341 @end menu
|
|
3342
|
|
3343 @node Bug Reports, Mailing List, Odds and Ends, Odds and Ends
|
|
3344 @appendixsec Bug Reports
|
|
3345
|
|
3346 @cindex bugs
|
|
3347 @cindex Gildea, Stephen
|
|
3348
|
|
3349 The current maintainer of mh-e is Stephen Gildea
|
|
3350 <@i{gildea@@lcs.mit.edu}>. Please mail bug reports directly to him, as
|
|
3351 well as any praise or suggestions. Please include the output of
|
|
3352 @kbd{M-x mh-version} (@pxref{Miscellaneous}) in any bug report you send.
|
|
3353
|
|
3354 @node Mailing List, MH FAQ, Bug Reports, Odds and Ends
|
|
3355 @appendixsec mh-e Mailing List
|
|
3356
|
|
3357 @cindex mailing list
|
|
3358
|
|
3359 There is a mailing list, @i{mh-e@@x.org}, for discussion of mh-e and
|
|
3360 announcements of new versions. Send a ``subscribe'' message to
|
|
3361 @i{mh-e-request@@x.org} to be added. Do not report bugs on this list;
|
|
3362 mail them directly to the maintainer (@pxref{Bug Reports}).
|
|
3363
|
|
3364 @node MH FAQ, Getting mh-e, Mailing List, Odds and Ends
|
|
3365 @appendixsec MH FAQ
|
|
3366
|
|
3367 @cindex MH FAQ
|
|
3368 @cindex FAQ
|
|
3369
|
|
3370 An FAQ appears monthly in the newsgroup @samp{comp.mail.mh}. While very
|
|
3371 little is there that deals with mh-e specifically, there is an
|
|
3372 incredible wealth of material about MH itself which you will find
|
|
3373 useful. The subject of the FAQ is @cite{MH Frequently Asked Questions
|
|
3374 (FAQ) with Answers}.
|
|
3375
|
|
3376 The FAQ can be also obtained by anonymous @code{ftp} or via the
|
|
3377 World Wide Web (WWW)@. It is located at:
|
|
3378
|
|
3379 @ifclear html
|
|
3380 @example
|
|
3381 ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/mh-faq/part1
|
|
3382 http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/mail/mh-faq/part1/faq.html
|
|
3383 @end example
|
|
3384 @end ifclear
|
|
3385
|
|
3386 @ifset html
|
|
3387 @example
|
|
3388 <A HREF="ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/mh-faq/part1">ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/mail/mh-faq/part1</A>
|
|
3389 <A HREF="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/mail/mh-faq/part1/faq.html">http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/mail/mh-faq/part1/faq.html</A>
|
|
3390 @end example
|
|
3391 @end ifset
|
|
3392
|
|
3393 Otherwise, you can use mail. Send mail to @i{mail-server@@rtfm.mit.edu}
|
|
3394 containing the following:
|
|
3395
|
|
3396 @example
|
|
3397 send usenet/news.answers/mail/mh-faq/part1
|
|
3398 @end example
|
|
3399
|
|
3400 @node Getting mh-e, , MH FAQ, Odds and Ends
|
|
3401 @appendixsec Getting mh-e
|
|
3402
|
|
3403 @cindex obtaining mh-e
|
|
3404
|
|
3405 If you're running a pre-4.0 version of mh-e, please consider upgrading.
|
|
3406 You can either have your system administrator upgrade your Emacs, or
|
|
3407 just the files for mh-e.
|
|
3408
|
|
3409 The MH distribution contains a copy of mh-e in @file{miscellany/mh-e}.
|
|
3410 Make sure it is at least @w{Version 4.0}.
|
|
3411
|
|
3412 The latest version of mh-e can be obtained via anonymous @code{ftp} from
|
|
3413 @samp{ftp.x.org}. The file containing mh-e is currently
|
|
3414 @ifclear html
|
|
3415 @file{/misc/mh-e/mh-e-@value{VERSION}.tar.Z}.
|
|
3416 @end ifclear
|
|
3417 @ifset html
|
|
3418 @file{<A HREF="ftp://ftp.x.org/misc/mh-e/mh-e-@value{VERSION}.tar.Z">/misc/mh-e/mh-e-@value{VERSION}.tar.Z</A>}
|
|
3419 @end ifset
|
|
3420 I suggest that you
|
|
3421 extract the files from @file{mh-e-@value{VERSION}.tar.Z} in the
|
|
3422 following fashion:
|
|
3423
|
|
3424 @example
|
|
3425 @group
|
|
3426 % @kbd{cd} # @r{Start in your home directory}
|
|
3427 % @kbd{mkdir lib lib/emacs} # @r{Create directory for mh-e}
|
|
3428 % @kbd{cd lib/emacs}
|
|
3429 % @kbd{zcat @var{path/to/}mh-e-@value{VERSION}.tar.Z | tar xvf -} # @r{Extract files}
|
|
3430 @end group
|
|
3431 @end example
|
|
3432
|
|
3433 @cindex @file{.emacs}
|
|
3434 @cindex files, @file{.emacs}
|
|
3435
|
|
3436 To use these new files, add the following to @file{~/.emacs}:
|
|
3437
|
|
3438 @lisp
|
|
3439 (setq load-path (cons (expand-file-name "~/lib/emacs") load-path))
|
|
3440 @end lisp
|
|
3441
|
|
3442 @cindex news
|
|
3443 @cindex files, @samp{MH-E-NEWS}
|
|
3444
|
|
3445 That's it! If you're already running Emacs, please quit that session
|
|
3446 and start again to load in the new mh-e. Check that you're running the
|
|
3447 new version with the command @kbd{M-x mh-version} after running any mh-e
|
|
3448 command. The distribution comes with a file called @file{MH-E-NEWS} so
|
|
3449 you can see what's new.
|
|
3450
|
|
3451 @node History, Changes to mh-e, Odds and Ends, Top
|
|
3452 @appendix History of mh-e
|
|
3453
|
|
3454 @cindex history of mh-e
|
|
3455
|
|
3456 mh-e was originally written by Brian Reid in 1983 and has changed hands
|
|
3457 twice since then. Jim Larus wanted to do something similar for GNU
|
|
3458 Emacs, and ended up completely rewriting it that same year. In 1989,
|
|
3459 Stephen Gildea picked it up and is now currently improving and
|
|
3460 maintaining it.
|
|
3461
|
|
3462 @menu
|
|
3463 * From Brian Reid::
|
|
3464 * From Jim Larus::
|
|
3465 * From Stephen Gildea::
|
|
3466 @end menu
|
|
3467
|
|
3468 @node From Brian Reid, From Jim Larus, History, History
|
|
3469 @appendixsec From Brian Reid
|
|
3470
|
|
3471 @cindex Reid, Brian
|
|
3472
|
|
3473 One day in 1983 I got the flu and had to stay home from work for three
|
|
3474 days with nothing to do. I used that time to write MHE@. The
|
|
3475 fundamental idea behind MHE was that it was a ``puppeteer'' driving the MH
|
|
3476 programs underneath it. MH had a model that the editor was supposed to
|
|
3477 run as a subprocess of the mailer, which seemed to me at the time to be
|
|
3478 the tail wagging the dog. So I turned it around and made the editor
|
|
3479 drive the MH programs. I made sure that the UCI people (who were
|
|
3480 maintaining MH at the time) took in my changes and made them stick.
|
|
3481
|
|
3482 Today, I still use my own version of MHE because I don't at all like the
|
|
3483 way that GNU mh-e works and I've never gotten to be good enough at
|
|
3484 hacking Emacs Lisp to make GNU mh-e do what I want. The Gosling-emacs
|
|
3485 version of MHE and the GNU Emacs version of mh-e have almost nothing in
|
|
3486 common except similar names. They work differently, have different
|
|
3487 conceptual models, and have different key bindings. @footnote{After
|
|
3488 reading this article, I questioned Brian about his version of MHE, and
|
|
3489 received some great ideas for improving mh-e such as a dired-like method
|
|
3490 of selecting folders; and removing the prompting when sending mail,
|
|
3491 filling in the blanks in the draft buffer instead. I passed them on to
|
|
3492 Stephen Gildea, the current maintainer, and he was excited about the
|
|
3493 ideas as well. Perhaps one day, mh-e will again resemble MHE, although
|
|
3494 none of these ideas are manifest in Version 5.0.}
|
|
3495
|
|
3496 Brian Reid, June 1994
|
|
3497
|
|
3498 @node From Jim Larus, From Stephen Gildea, From Brian Reid, History
|
|
3499 @appendixsec From Jim Larus
|
|
3500
|
|
3501 @cindex Larus, Jim
|
|
3502
|
|
3503 Brian Reid, while at CMU or shortly after going to Stanford wrote a mail
|
|
3504 reading program called MHE for Gosling Emacs. It had much the same
|
|
3505 structure as mh-e (i.e., invoked MH programs), though it was simpler and
|
|
3506 the commands were slightly different. Unfortunately, I no longer have a
|
|
3507 copy so the differences are lost in the mists of time.
|
|
3508
|
|
3509 In '82-83, I was working at BBN and wrote a lot of mlisp code in Gosling
|
|
3510 Emacs to make it look more like Tennex Emacs. One of the packages that
|
|
3511 I picked up and improved was Reid's mail system. In '83, I went back to
|
|
3512 Berkeley. About that time, Stallman's first version of GNU Emacs came
|
|
3513 out and people started to move to it from Gosling Emacs (as I recall,
|
|
3514 the transition took a year or two). I decided to port Reid's MHE and
|
|
3515 used the mlisp to Emacs Lisp translator that came with GNU Emacs. It
|
|
3516 did a lousy job and the resulting code didn't work, so I bit the bullet
|
|
3517 and rewrote the code by hand (it was a lot smaller and simpler then, so
|
|
3518 it took only a day or two).
|
|
3519
|
|
3520 Soon after that, mh-e became part of the standard Emacs distribution and
|
|
3521 suggestions kept dribbling in for improvements. mh-e soon reached
|
|
3522 sufficient functionality to keep me happy, but I kept on improving it
|
|
3523 because I was a graduate student with plenty of time on my hands and it
|
|
3524 was more fun than my dissertation. In retrospect, the one thing that I
|
|
3525 regret is not writing any documentation, which seriously limited the use
|
|
3526 and appeal of the package.
|
|
3527
|
|
3528 @cindex @code{xmh}, in mh-e history
|
|
3529
|
|
3530 In '89, I came to Wisconsin as a professor and decided not to work on
|
|
3531 mh-e. It was stable, except for minor bugs, and had enough
|
|
3532 functionality, so I let it be for a few years. Stephen Gildea of BBN
|
|
3533 began to pester me about the bugs, but I ignored them. In 1990, he went
|
|
3534 off to the X Consortium, said good bye, and said that he would now be
|
|
3535 using @code{xmh}. A few months later, he came back and said that he
|
|
3536 couldn't stand @code{xmh} and could I put a few more bug fixes into
|
|
3537 mh-e. At that point, I had no interest in fixing mh-e, so I gave the
|
|
3538 responsibility of maintenance to him and he has done a fine job since
|
|
3539 then.
|
|
3540
|
|
3541 Jim Larus, June 1994
|
|
3542
|
|
3543 @node From Stephen Gildea, , From Jim Larus, History
|
|
3544 @appendixsec From Stephen Gildea
|
|
3545
|
|
3546 @cindex Gildea, Stephen
|
|
3547
|
|
3548 In 1987 I went to work for Bolt Beranek and Newman, as Jim had before
|
|
3549 me. In my previous job, I had been using RMAIL, but as my folders tend
|
|
3550 to run large, I was frustrated with the speed of RMAIL@. However, I
|
|
3551 stuck with it because I wanted the GNU Emacs interface. I am very
|
|
3552 familiar and comfortable with the Emacs interface (with just a few
|
|
3553 modifications of my own) and dislike having to use applications with
|
|
3554 embedded editors; they never live up to Emacs.
|
|
3555
|
|
3556 MH is the mail reader of choice at BBN, so I converted to it. Since I
|
|
3557 didn't want to give up using an Emacs interface, I started using mh-e.
|
|
3558 As is my wont, I started hacking on it almost immediately. I first used
|
|
3559 version 3.4m. One of the first features I added was to treat the folder
|
|
3560 buffer as a file-visiting buffer: you could lock it, save it, and be
|
|
3561 warned of unsaved changes when killing it. I also worked to bring its
|
|
3562 functionality a little closer to RMAIL@. Jim Larus was very cooperative
|
|
3563 about merging in my changes, and my efforts first appeared in version
|
|
3564 3.6, distributed with Emacs 18.52 in 1988. Next I decided mh-e was too
|
|
3565 slow and optimized it a lot. Version, 3.7, distributed with Emacs 18.56
|
|
3566 in 1990, was noticeably faster.
|
|
3567
|
|
3568 When I moved to the X Consortium I became the first person there to not
|
|
3569 use xmh. (There is now one other engineer there using mh-e.) About
|
|
3570 this point I took over maintenance of mh-e from Jim and was finally able
|
|
3571 to add some features Jim hadn't accepted, such as the backward searching
|
|
3572 undo. My first release was 3.8 (Emacs 18.58) in 1992.
|
|
3573
|
|
3574 Now, in 1994, we see a flurry of releases, with both 4.0 and 5.0.
|
|
3575 Version 4.0 added many new features, including background folder
|
|
3576 collection and support for composing @sc{mime} messages. (Reading
|
|
3577 @sc{mime} messages remains to be done, alas.) While writing this book,
|
|
3578 Bill Wohler gave mh-e its closest examination ever, uncovering bugs and
|
|
3579 inconsistencies that required a new major version to fix, and so version
|
|
3580 5 was released.
|
|
3581
|
|
3582 Stephen Gildea, June 1994
|
|
3583
|
|
3584 @node Changes to mh-e, Copying, History, Top
|
|
3585 @appendix Changes to mh-e
|
|
3586
|
|
3587 @cindex @code{mh-e}: comparison between versions
|
|
3588
|
|
3589 mh-e had a fairly major facelift between @w{Versions 3} and 4. The
|
|
3590 differences between @w{Versions 4} and 5 from the user's viewpoint are
|
|
3591 relatively minor. The prompting order for the folder and message number
|
|
3592 in a couple of functions had been switched inadvertently in @w{Version
|
|
3593 4}. @w{Version 5} switches the order back. The @file{+inbox} folder is
|
|
3594 no longer hard-coded, but rather uses the @samp{Inbox} MH Profile entry.
|
|
3595 See the file @file{etc/MH-E-NEWS} in the Emacs distribution for more
|
|
3596 details on the changes.
|
|
3597
|
|
3598 This section documents the changes between @w{Version 3} and newer
|
|
3599 versions so that you'll know which commands to use (or which commands
|
|
3600 you won't have) in case you're stuck with an old version.
|
|
3601
|
|
3602 The following tables summarize the changes to buffer names, commands
|
|
3603 and variables.
|
|
3604
|
|
3605 @unnumberedsec Buffer Mode Names
|
|
3606
|
|
3607 @example
|
|
3608 @group
|
|
3609 @b{Version 3} @b{Version 4}
|
|
3610
|
|
3611 mh-e folder MH-Folder
|
|
3612 mh-e scan MH-Folder
|
|
3613 mh-e show MH-Folder Show
|
|
3614 Fundamental MH-Show
|
|
3615 mh-e letter MH-Letter
|
|
3616 mh-e letter MH-Pick
|
|
3617 @end group
|
|
3618 @end example
|
|
3619
|
|
3620 @page
|
|
3621
|
|
3622 @unnumberedsec Commands
|
|
3623
|
|
3624 @example
|
|
3625 @group
|
|
3626 @b{Version 3} @b{Version 4}
|
|
3627
|
|
3628 @b{Function} @b{Command} @b{Command} @b{Function}
|
|
3629
|
|
3630 mh-first-msg < M-< mh-first-msg
|
|
3631 - - M-> mh-last-msg
|
|
3632 mh-show . RET mh-show
|
|
3633 - - , mh-header-display
|
|
3634 mh-reply a r mh-reply
|
|
3635 mh-redistribute r M-d mh-redistribute
|
|
3636 mh-unshar-msg - M-n mh-store-msg
|
|
3637 mh-write-msg-to-file M-o C-o mh-write-msg-to-file
|
|
3638 mh-delete-msg-from-seq C-u M-% M-# mh-delete-seq
|
|
3639 - - M-q mh-list-sequences
|
|
3640 mh-quit b q mh-quit
|
|
3641 - - C-C C-f C-r mh-to-field (@samp{From:})
|
|
3642 - - C-C C-f C-d mh-to-field (@samp{Dcc:})
|
|
3643 @end group
|
|
3644 @end example
|
|
3645
|
|
3646 @unnumberedsec Variables
|
|
3647
|
|
3648 @example
|
|
3649 @group
|
|
3650 @b{Version 3} @b{Version 4}
|
|
3651
|
|
3652 @b{Variable} @b{Value} @b{Value} @b{Variable}
|
|
3653
|
|
3654 mh-show-buffer- "@{%%b@} %s/%d" "@{show-%s@} %d" mh-show-buffer-
|
|
3655 mode-line-buffer-id mode-line-buffer-id
|
|
3656 mh-unshar-default- "" nil mh-store-default-
|
|
3657 directory directory
|
|
3658 @end group
|
|
3659 @end example
|
|
3660
|
|
3661
|
|
3662 @unnumberedsec New Variables
|
|
3663
|
|
3664 @example
|
|
3665 @group
|
|
3666 mail-citation-hook mh-new-draft-cleaned-headers
|
|
3667 mail-header-separator mh-pick-mode-hook
|
|
3668 mh-auto-folder-collect mh-refile-msg-hook
|
|
3669 mh-comp-formfile mh-scan-prog
|
|
3670 mh-repl-formfile mh-send-prog
|
|
3671 mh-delete-msg-hook mh-show-hook
|
|
3672 mh-forward-subject-format mh-show-mode-hook
|
|
3673 mh-inc-prog mh-signature-file-name
|
|
3674 mh-mime-content-types mh-sortm-args
|
|
3675 mh-default-folder-for-message-function mh-repl-formfile
|
|
3676 mh-mhn-args
|
|
3677 @end group
|
|
3678 @end example
|
|
3679
|
|
3680 @node Copying, Command Index, Changes to mh-e, Top
|
|
3681 @appendix GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
|
|
3682 @center Version 2, June 1991
|
|
3683
|
|
3684 @display
|
|
3685 Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
|
3686 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
|
|
3687
|
|
3688 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
|
|
3689 of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
|
|
3690 @end display
|
|
3691
|
|
3692 @appendixsec Preamble
|
|
3693
|
|
3694 The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
|
|
3695 freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
|
|
3696 License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
|
|
3697 software---to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
|
|
3698 General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
|
|
3699 Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
|
|
3700 using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
|
|
3701 the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
|
|
3702 your programs, too.
|
|
3703
|
|
3704 When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
|
|
3705 price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
|
|
3706 have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for
|
|
3707 this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it
|
|
3708 if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it
|
|
3709 in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.
|
|
3710
|
|
3711 To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
|
|
3712 anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
|
|
3713 These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
|
|
3714 distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
|
|
3715
|
|
3716 For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether
|
|
3717 gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that
|
|
3718 you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
|
|
3719 source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their
|
|
3720 rights.
|
|
3721
|
|
3722 We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
|
|
3723 (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy,
|
|
3724 distribute and/or modify the software.
|
|
3725
|
|
3726 Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain
|
|
3727 that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free
|
|
3728 software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we
|
|
3729 want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so
|
|
3730 that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original
|
|
3731 authors' reputations.
|
|
3732
|
|
3733 Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software
|
|
3734 patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free
|
|
3735 program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the
|
|
3736 program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any
|
|
3737 patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.
|
|
3738
|
|
3739 The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
|
|
3740 modification follow.
|
|
3741
|
|
3742 @iftex
|
|
3743 @appendixsec TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
|
|
3744 @end iftex
|
|
3745 @ifinfo
|
|
3746 @center TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
|
|
3747 @end ifinfo
|
|
3748
|
|
3749 @enumerate 0
|
|
3750 @item
|
|
3751 This License applies to any program or other work which contains
|
|
3752 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed
|
|
3753 under the terms of this General Public License. The ``Program'', below,
|
|
3754 refers to any such program or work, and a ``work based on the Program''
|
|
3755 means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law:
|
|
3756 that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it,
|
|
3757 either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another
|
|
3758 language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in
|
|
3759 the term ``modification''.) Each licensee is addressed as ``you''.
|
|
3760
|
|
3761 Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
|
|
3762 covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of
|
|
3763 running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
|
|
3764 is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
|
|
3765 Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
|
|
3766 Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
|
|
3767
|
|
3768 @item
|
|
3769 You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's
|
|
3770 source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you
|
|
3771 conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
|
|
3772 copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
|
|
3773 notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
|
|
3774 and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
|
|
3775 along with the Program.
|
|
3776
|
|
3777 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
|
|
3778 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
|
|
3779
|
|
3780 @item
|
|
3781 You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion
|
|
3782 of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and
|
|
3783 distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1
|
|
3784 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
|
|
3785
|
|
3786 @enumerate a
|
|
3787 @item
|
|
3788 You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices
|
|
3789 stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
|
|
3790
|
|
3791 @item
|
|
3792 You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in
|
|
3793 whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
|
|
3794 part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
|
|
3795 parties under the terms of this License.
|
|
3796
|
|
3797 @item
|
|
3798 If the modified program normally reads commands interactively
|
|
3799 when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
|
|
3800 interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
|
|
3801 announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
|
|
3802 notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
|
|
3803 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
|
|
3804 these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this
|
|
3805 License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but
|
|
3806 does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
|
|
3807 the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
|
|
3808 @end enumerate
|
|
3809
|
|
3810 These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
|
|
3811 identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
|
|
3812 and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
|
|
3813 themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those
|
|
3814 sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
|
|
3815 distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
|
|
3816 on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of
|
|
3817 this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the
|
|
3818 entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.
|
|
3819
|
|
3820 Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest
|
|
3821 your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to
|
|
3822 exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or
|
|
3823 collective works based on the Program.
|
|
3824
|
|
3825 In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program
|
|
3826 with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of
|
|
3827 a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under
|
|
3828 the scope of this License.
|
|
3829
|
|
3830 @item
|
|
3831 You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it,
|
|
3832 under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
|
|
3833 Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
|
|
3834
|
|
3835 @enumerate a
|
|
3836 @item
|
|
3837 Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
|
|
3838 source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections
|
|
3839 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
|
|
3840
|
|
3841 @item
|
|
3842 Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
|
|
3843 years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your
|
|
3844 cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete
|
|
3845 machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be
|
|
3846 distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium
|
|
3847 customarily used for software interchange; or,
|
|
3848
|
|
3849 @item
|
|
3850 Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer
|
|
3851 to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
|
|
3852 allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
|
|
3853 received the program in object code or executable form with such
|
|
3854 an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)
|
|
3855 @end enumerate
|
|
3856
|
|
3857 The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for
|
|
3858 making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source
|
|
3859 code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any
|
|
3860 associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to
|
|
3861 control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a
|
|
3862 special exception, the source code distributed need not include
|
|
3863 anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary
|
|
3864 form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the
|
|
3865 operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component
|
|
3866 itself accompanies the executable.
|
|
3867
|
|
3868 If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering
|
|
3869 access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent
|
|
3870 access to copy the source code from the same place counts as
|
|
3871 distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not
|
|
3872 compelled to copy the source along with the object code.
|
|
3873
|
|
3874 @item
|
|
3875 You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program
|
|
3876 except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
|
|
3877 otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is
|
|
3878 void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
|
|
3879 However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under
|
|
3880 this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such
|
|
3881 parties remain in full compliance.
|
|
3882
|
|
3883 @item
|
|
3884 You are not required to accept this License, since you have not
|
|
3885 signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or
|
|
3886 distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are
|
|
3887 prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by
|
|
3888 modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the
|
|
3889 Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and
|
|
3890 all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying
|
|
3891 the Program or works based on it.
|
|
3892
|
|
3893 @item
|
|
3894 Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the
|
|
3895 Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the
|
|
3896 original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to
|
|
3897 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further
|
|
3898 restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein.
|
|
3899 You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to
|
|
3900 this License.
|
|
3901
|
|
3902 @item
|
|
3903 If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent
|
|
3904 infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues),
|
|
3905 conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
|
|
3906 otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not
|
|
3907 excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot
|
|
3908 distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
|
|
3909 License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you
|
|
3910 may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent
|
|
3911 license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by
|
|
3912 all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then
|
|
3913 the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to
|
|
3914 refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.
|
|
3915
|
|
3916 If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under
|
|
3917 any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to
|
|
3918 apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other
|
|
3919 circumstances.
|
|
3920
|
|
3921 It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any
|
|
3922 patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any
|
|
3923 such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the
|
|
3924 integrity of the free software distribution system, which is
|
|
3925 implemented by public license practices. Many people have made
|
|
3926 generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed
|
|
3927 through that system in reliance on consistent application of that
|
|
3928 system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing
|
|
3929 to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot
|
|
3930 impose that choice.
|
|
3931
|
|
3932 This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to
|
|
3933 be a consequence of the rest of this License.
|
|
3934
|
|
3935 @item
|
|
3936 If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in
|
|
3937 certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
|
|
3938 original copyright holder who places the Program under this License
|
|
3939 may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding
|
|
3940 those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among
|
|
3941 countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates
|
|
3942 the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
|
|
3943
|
|
3944 @item
|
|
3945 The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
|
|
3946 of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
|
|
3947 be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
|
|
3948 address new problems or concerns.
|
|
3949
|
|
3950 Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
|
|
3951 specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and ``any
|
|
3952 later version'', you have the option of following the terms and conditions
|
|
3953 either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
|
|
3954 Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
|
|
3955 this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
|
|
3956 Foundation.
|
|
3957
|
|
3958 @item
|
|
3959 If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
|
|
3960 programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author
|
|
3961 to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
|
|
3962 Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes
|
|
3963 make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals
|
|
3964 of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and
|
|
3965 of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
|
|
3966
|
|
3967 @iftex
|
|
3968 @heading NO WARRANTY
|
|
3969 @end iftex
|
|
3970 @ifinfo
|
|
3971 @center NO WARRANTY
|
|
3972 @end ifinfo
|
|
3973
|
|
3974 @item
|
|
3975 BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
|
|
3976 FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW@. EXCEPT WHEN
|
|
3977 OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
|
|
3978 PROVIDE THE PROGRAM ``AS IS'' WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
|
|
3979 OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
|
|
3980 MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE@. THE ENTIRE RISK AS
|
|
3981 TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU@. SHOULD THE
|
|
3982 PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
|
|
3983 REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
|
|
3984
|
|
3985 @item
|
|
3986 IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
|
|
3987 WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
|
|
3988 REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
|
|
3989 INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
|
|
3990 OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
|
|
3991 TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
|
|
3992 YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER
|
|
3993 PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
|
|
3994 POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
|
|
3995 @end enumerate
|
|
3996
|
|
3997 @iftex
|
|
3998 @heading END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
|
|
3999 @end iftex
|
|
4000 @ifinfo
|
|
4001 @center END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
|
|
4002 @end ifinfo
|
|
4003
|
|
4004 @page
|
|
4005 @appendixsec How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
|
|
4006
|
|
4007 If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
|
|
4008 possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
|
|
4009 free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
|
|
4010
|
|
4011 To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
|
|
4012 to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
|
|
4013 convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
|
|
4014 the ``copyright'' line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
|
|
4015
|
|
4016 @smallexample
|
|
4017 @var{one line to give the program's name and an idea of what it does.}
|
|
4018 Copyright (C) 19@var{yy} @var{name of author}
|
|
4019
|
|
4020 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
|
|
4021 modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
|
|
4022 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
|
|
4023 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
|
|
4024
|
|
4025 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
|
|
4026 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
|
|
4027 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE@. See the
|
|
4028 GNU General Public License for more details.
|
|
4029
|
|
4030 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
|
|
4031 with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
|
|
4032 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
|
|
4033 @end smallexample
|
|
4034
|
|
4035 Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
|
|
4036
|
|
4037 If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
|
|
4038 when it starts in an interactive mode:
|
|
4039
|
|
4040 @smallexample
|
|
4041 Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19@var{yy} @var{name of author}
|
|
4042 Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details
|
|
4043 type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome
|
|
4044 to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c'
|
|
4045 for details.
|
|
4046 @end smallexample
|
|
4047
|
|
4048 The hypothetical commands @samp{show w} and @samp{show c} should show
|
|
4049 the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the
|
|
4050 commands you use may be called something other than @samp{show w} and
|
|
4051 @samp{show c}; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items---whatever
|
|
4052 suits your program.
|
|
4053
|
|
4054 You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
|
|
4055 school, if any, to sign a ``copyright disclaimer'' for the program, if
|
|
4056 necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
|
|
4057
|
|
4058 @smallexample
|
|
4059 @group
|
|
4060 Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright
|
|
4061 interest in the program `Gnomovision'
|
|
4062 (which makes passes at compilers) written
|
|
4063 by James Hacker.
|
|
4064
|
|
4065 @var{signature of Ty Coon}, 1 April 1989
|
|
4066 Ty Coon, President of Vice
|
|
4067 @end group
|
|
4068 @end smallexample
|
|
4069
|
|
4070 This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
|
|
4071 proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
|
|
4072 consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
|
|
4073 library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
|
|
4074 Public License instead of this License.
|
|
4075
|
|
4076 @node Command Index, Variable Index, Copying, Top
|
|
4077 @unnumbered Command Index
|
|
4078
|
|
4079 @printindex fn
|
|
4080
|
|
4081 @node Variable Index, Concept Index, Command Index, Top
|
|
4082 @unnumbered Variable Index
|
|
4083
|
|
4084 @printindex vr
|
|
4085
|
|
4086 @node Concept Index, , Variable Index, Top
|
|
4087 @unnumbered Concept Index
|
|
4088
|
|
4089 @printindex cp
|
|
4090
|
|
4091 @contents
|
|
4092 @bye
|
|
4093
|
|
4094 @c XXX In the sections on customizing mh-e, you can add cross-references
|
|
4095 @c to the Emacs manual and the Emacs Lisp manual wherever they are
|
|
4096 @c useful. @pxref{node, , section, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}
|