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(1)

Version 8.0.3 of MH-E will appear in GNU Emacs 22.1. It is supported in GNU Emacs 21, as well as XEmacs 21 (except for versions 21.5.9-21.5.16). It is compatible with MH versions 6.8.4 and higher, all versions of nmh, and GNU mailutils 1.0 and higher.

(2)

If you are using Version 20 or earlier of Emacs, you will need to use the <DEL> key.

(3)

In very old versions of MH-E, you may get the error message, ‘Cannot find the commands `inc' and `mhl' and the file `components'’ if MH-E can't find MH. In this case, you need to update MH-E, and you may need to install MH too. However, newer versions of MH-E are better at finding MH if it is on your system.

(4)

See the section Setting Up MH in the MH book.

(5)

The keys mentioned in these chapters refer to the default key bindings. If you've changed the bindings, refer to the command summaries at the beginning of each chapter for a mapping between default key bindings and function names.

(6)

A mode changes Emacs to make it easier to edit a particular type of text.

(7)

If you're running Emacs under the X Window System, then you would also see a menu bar and a tool bar. I've left out the menu bar and tool bar in all of the example screens.

(8)

You can get quick help for the commands used most often with C-c ? or more complete help with the C-h m (describe-mode) command.

(9)

See the section Reading Mail: inc show next prev in the MH book.

(10)

See the section Find and Specify with scan pick Ranges Sequences in the MH book.

(11)

This help appears in a buffer called ‘*MH-E Help*’ (voir la section Miscellaneous Commands, Variables, and Buffers).

(12)

The The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual may also be available online in the Info system by typing C-h i m Emacs Lisp <RET>. You can also order a printed manual, which has the desirable side-effect of helping to support the Free Software Foundation which made all this great software available. You can find an order form by running C-h C-d, or you can request an order form from gnu at gnu.org.

(13)

If you want to see your old mail as well, use F r to pull all your messages into MH-E. Or, give a prefix argument to mh-rmail so it will prompt you for folder to visit like F v (for example, C-u M-x mh-rmail <RET> bob <RET>). Voir la section Organizing Your Mail with Folders.

(14)

The ‘Face:’ field appeared in GNU Emacs 21 and XEmacs. For more information, see http://quimby.gnus.org/circus/face/.

(15)

The display of this field requires the uncompface program. Recent versions of XEmacs have internal support for ‘X-Face:’ images. If your version of XEmacs does not, then you'll need both uncompface and the x-face’ package.

(16)

The display of the images requires the wget program to fetch the image and the convert program from the ImageMagick suite.

(17)

See the section Reading Mail: inc show next prev in the MH book.

(18)

See the section Reading MIME Mail in the MH book.

(19)

You can call them directly from Emacs if you're running the X Window System: type M-! xterm -e mhshow message-number. You can leave out the ‘xterm -e’ if you use mhlist or mhstore.

(20)

This plumbing is the ‘Content-Disposition:’ header field.

(21)

This feature depends on a version of Gnus that is at least 5.10.

(22)

See the section Bursting Messages in the MH book.

(23)

This feature depends on post-5.10 versions of Gnus. MIME Security with OpenPGP is documented in RFC 3156. However, MH-E can also decrypt old-style PGP messages that are not in MIME format.

(24)

Unfortunately in the current version, the validation process doesn't display a message so it appears that MH-E has hung. We hope that this will be fixed in the future.

(25)

See the section Using mhl in the MH book.

(26)

In previous versions of MH-E, this option suppressed the confirmation in mh-kill-folder. Since this kept most users from setting this option, mh-kill-folder was modified in version 6.0 to always ask for confirmation subject to mh-kill-folder-suppress-prompt-hook. Voir la section Organizing Your Mail with Folders.

(27)

Stephen Gildea's favorite binding is (global-set-key "\C-cr" 'mh-rmail).

(28)

See the sections Your Current Folder: folder and Moving and Linking Messages: refile in the MH book.

(29)

For you Emacs wizards, this is implemented as an Emacs minor mode.

(30)

See the section Sorting Messages: sortm in the MH book.

(31)

I highly recommend that you use a draft folder so that you can edit several drafts in parallel. To do so, create a folder named ‘+drafts’ for example, and add the profile component ‘Draft-Folder: drafts’ (see mh-profile(5)).

(32)

Actually, because MH-Letter mode inherits from Mail mode, the hooks text-mode-hook and mail-mode-hook are run (in that order) before mh-letter-mode-hook.

(33)

See the section Replying to Messages: repl in the MH book.

(34)

See the section Forwarding Messages: forw in the MH book.

(35)

See the section Distributing Messages with dist in the MH book.

(36)

See the section Sending Some Mail: comp send in the MH book.

(37)

If you'd rather have the header cleaned up, use C-u r instead of r when replying (voir la section Replying to Mail).

(38)

In the past you would use this setting and set mail-citation-hook to ‘supercite’, but this usage is now deprecated in favor of the ‘Invoke supercite’ setting.

(39)

Supercite is a full-bodied, full-featured, citation package that comes standard with Emacs.

(40)

MIME is defined in RFC 2045.

(41)

See the section Sending MIME Mail in the MH book.

(42)

See the section Composing in The Emacs MIME Manual.

(43)

Use C-c C-e (mh-mh-to-mime) if you're using MH-style directives.

(44)

See the section Sending MIME Mail in the MH book.

(45)

See the section What now? – and the whatnow Program in the MH book.

(46)

See the section Sending Some Mail: comp send in the MH book.

(47)

See the section MH Aliases in the MH book.

(48)

Mail-Followup-To:’ is supported by nmh.

(49)

See the section Searching for Sequences with flist in the MH book.

(50)

If you're not sure if MH-E has been byte-compiled, you could try running ‘locate mh-thread.elc’ or otherwise find MH-E on your system and ensure that ‘mh-thread.elc’ exists. If you have multiple versions and you find that one is compiled but the other is not, then go into your ‘*scratch*’ buffer in Emacs, enter load-path C-j, and ensure that the byte-compiled version appears first in the load-path. If you find that MH-E is not compiled and you installed MH-E yourself, please refer to the installation directions in the file ‘README’ in the distribution.

(51)

See pick(1) or the section Finding Messages with pick in the MH book.

(52)

See the section More About Sequences in the MH book.

(53)

See ‘mh-profile’(5)).

(54)

See the section Make Message Bookmarks with mark in the MH book.

(55)

Note that the option mh-junk-background is used as the display argument in the call to call-process. Therefore, turning on this option means setting its value to ‘0’. You can also set its value to ‘t’ to direct the programs' output to the ‘*MH-E Log*’ buffer; this may be useful for debugging.

(56)

See the section Find and Specify with scan pick Ranges Sequences in the MH book.

(57)

See the section Reading Mail: inc show next prev in the MH book.

(58)

The MH equivalent, slocal, can be used as well, but procmail is more flexible and more packages exist for procmail than for slocal.

(59)

See Savannah issue #4361 to see if rcvstore locking is still an issue.

(60)

The ‘-create’ argument wasn't always the default to rcvstore.

(61)

After reading this article, I questioned Brian about his version of MHE, and received some great ideas for improving MH-E such as a dired-like method of selecting folders; and removing the prompting when sending mail, filling in the blanks in the draft buffer instead. I passed them on to Stephen Gildea, the current maintainer, and he was excited about the ideas as well. Perhaps one day, MH-E will again resemble MHE (draft form editing was introduced in version 7.4).


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