Mercurial > emacs
changeset 8444:841f2c8ae5bb
Doc fixes.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Aug 1994 21:08:04 +0000 |
parents | 5b87f56b6a6d |
children | 81f7b5d9b990 |
files | lisp/=gnus.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 17 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lisp/=gnus.el Thu Aug 04 20:15:36 1994 +0000 +++ b/lisp/=gnus.el Thu Aug 04 21:08:04 1994 +0000 @@ -2128,6 +2128,11 @@ gnus-summary-save-in-file. The variable is initialized from the SAVEDIR environment variable. + gnus-kill-files-directory + Specifies a directory name to save KILL files to using the commands + gnus-edit-global-kill, and gnus-edit-local-kill. The variable is + initialized from the SAVEDIR environment variable. + gnus-show-all-headers Non-nil means that all headers of an article are shown. @@ -4680,27 +4685,27 @@ \\[gnus-kill-file-exit] Save file and exit editing KILL file. \\[gnus-info-find-node] Read Info about KILL file. - A KILL file contains lisp expressions to be applied to a selected -newsgroup. The purpose is to mark articles as read on the basis of -some set of regexps. A global KILL file is applied to every newsgroup, -and a local KILL file is applied to a specified newsgroup. Since a + A KILL file contains Lisp expressions to be applied to a selected +newsgroup. The purpose is to mark articles as read on the basis of +some set of regexps. A global KILL file is applied to every newsgroup, +and a local KILL file is applied to a specified newsgroup. Since a global KILL file is applied to every newsgroup, for better performance use a local one. - A KILL file can contain any kind of Emacs lisp expressions expected -to be evaluated in the Summary buffer. Writing lisp programs for this + A KILL file can contain any kind of Emacs Lisp expressions expected +to be evaluated in the Summary buffer. Writing Lisp programs for this purpose is not so easy because the internal working of GNUS must be -well-known. For this reason, GNUS provides a general function which +well-known. For this reason, GNUS provides a general function which does this easily for non-Lisp programmers. The `gnus-kill' function executes commands available in Summary Mode by their key sequences. `gnus-kill' should be called with FIELD, -REGEXP and optional COMMAND and ALL. FIELD is a string representing -the header field or an empty string. If FIELD is an empty string, the -entire article body is searched for. REGEXP is a string which is +REGEXP and optional COMMAND and ALL. FIELD is a string representing +the header field or an empty string. If FIELD is an empty string, the +entire article body is searched for. REGEXP is a string which is compared with FIELD value. COMMAND is a string representing a valid -key sequence in Summary Mode or Lisp expression. COMMAND is default to -'(gnus-summary-mark-as-read nil \"X\"). Make sure that COMMAND is +key sequence in Summary mode or Lisp expression. COMMAND defaults to +'(gnus-summary-mark-as-read nil \"X\"). Make sure that COMMAND is executed in the Summary buffer. If the second optional argument ALL is non-nil, the COMMAND is applied to articles which are already marked as read or unread. Articles which are marked are skipped over