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Using Rmail in the simplest fashion, you have one Rmail file ‘~/RMAIL’
in which all of your mail is saved. It is called your primary Rmail
file. The command M-x rmail reads your primary Rmail file, merges
new mail in from your inboxes, displays the first message you haven't read
yet, and lets you begin reading. The variable rmail-file-name
specifies the name of the primary Rmail file.
Rmail uses narrowing to hide all but one message in the Rmail file. The message that is shown is called the current message. Rmail mode's special commands can do such things as delete the current message, copy it into another file, send a reply, or move to another message. You can also create multiple Rmail files and use Rmail to move messages between them.
Within the Rmail file, messages are normally arranged sequentially in order of receipt; you can specify other ways to sort them. Messages are identified by consecutive integers which are their message numbers. The number of the current message is displayed in Rmail's mode line, followed by the total number of messages in the file. You can move to a message by specifying its message number with the j key (voir la section Moving Among Messages).
Following the usual conventions of Emacs, changes in an Rmail file become
permanent only when you save the file. You can save it with s
(rmail-expunge-and-save
), which also expunges deleted messages from
the file first (voir la section Deleting Messages). To save the file without
expunging, use C-x C-s. Rmail also saves the Rmail file after merging
new mail from an inbox file (voir la section Rmail Files and Inboxes).
You can exit Rmail with q (rmail-quit
); this expunges and saves
the Rmail file, then buries the Rmail buffer as well as its summary buffer,
if present (voir la section Summaries). But there is no need to “exit”
formally. If you switch from Rmail to editing in other buffers, and never
switch back, you have exited. Just make sure to save the Rmail file
eventually (like any other file you have changed). C-x s is a
suitable way to do this (voir la section Commands for Saving Files). The Rmail command b,
rmail-bury
, buries the Rmail buffer and its summary buffer without
expunging and saving the Rmail file.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.