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MH-E does offer a couple of commands that are not a part of MH. The first
one, > (mh-write-msg-to-file
), writes a message to a file. You
are prompted for the filename. If the file already exists, the message is
appended to it. You can also write the message to the file without the
header by specifying a prefix argument (such as C-u > /tmp/foobar
<RET>). Subsequent writes to the same file can be made with the command
! (mh-refile-or-write-again
).
You can also pipe the message through a Unix shell command with the command
| (mh-pipe-msg
). You are prompted for the Unix command through
which you wish to run your message. If you give a prefix argument to this
command, the message header is included in the text passed to the command
(the contrived example C-u | lpr would be done with the l
command instead).
If the message is a shell archive shar
or has been run through
uuencode
use X s (mh-store-msg
) to extract the body
of the message. The default directory for extraction is the current
directory; however, you have a chance to specify a different extraction
directory. The next time you use this command, the default directory is the
last directory you used. If you would like to change the initial default
directory, customize the option mh-store-default-directory
, change
the value from ‘Current’ to ‘Directory’, and then enter the name
of the directory for storing the content of these messages.
By the way, X s calls the Emacs Lisp function
mh-store-buffer
. I mention this because you can use it directly if
you're editing a buffer that contains a file that has been run through
uuencode
or shar
. For example, you can extract the
contents of the current buffer in your home directory by typing M-x
mh-store-buffer <RET> ~ <RET>.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 27 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.