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Move to the beginning of the message body text (mail-text
).
Insert the file ‘~/.signature’ at the end of the message text
(mail-signature
).
Insert the contents of file at the end of the outgoing message
(mail-attach-file
).
Perform spelling correction on the message text, but not on citations from other messages.
C-c C-t (mail-text
) moves point to just after the header
separator line—that is, to the beginning of the message body text.
C-c C-w (mail-signature
) adds a standard piece of text at the
end of the message to say more about who you are. The text comes from the
file ‘~/.signature’ in your home directory. To insert your signature
automatically, set the variable mail-signature
to t
; after
that, starting a mail message automatically inserts the contents of your
‘~/.signature’ file. If you want to omit your signature from a
particular message, delete it from the buffer before you send the message.
You can also set mail-signature
to a string; then that string is
inserted automatically as your signature when you start editing a message to
send. If you set it to some other Lisp expression, the expression is
evaluated each time, and its value (which should be a string) specifies the
signature.
You can do spelling correction on the message text you have written with the
command M-x ispell-message. If you have yanked an incoming message
into the outgoing draft, this command skips what was yanked, but it checks
the text that you yourself inserted. (It looks for indentation or
mail-yank-prefix
to distinguish the cited lines from your input.)
Voir la section Checking and Correcting Spelling.
To include a file in the outgoing message, you can use C-x i, the
usual command to insert a file in the current buffer. But it is often more
convenient to use a special command, C-c C-i
(mail-attach-file
). This command inserts the file contents at the
end of the buffer, after your signature if any, with a delimiter line that
includes the file name. Note that this is not a MIME attachment.
Turning on Mail mode (which C-x m does automatically) runs the normal
hooks text-mode-hook
and mail-mode-hook
. Initializing a new
outgoing message runs the normal hook mail-setup-hook
; if you want to
add special fields to your mail header or make other changes to the
appearance of the mail buffer, use that hook. Voir la section Hooks.
The main difference between these hooks is just when they are invoked.
Whenever you type M-x mail, mail-mode-hook
runs as soon as the
‘*mail*’ buffer is created. Then the mail-setup
function
inserts the default contents of the buffer. After these default contents
are inserted, mail-setup-hook
runs.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.