From 926dbbb0533b676d17e208a688be418397ae0a5e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bill Wohler Date: Tue, 21 Mar 2006 22:20:19 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] (Folders): Various edits. --- man/ChangeLog | 4 ++++ man/mh-e.texi | 34 ++++++++++++++++------------------ 2 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/ChangeLog b/man/ChangeLog index 7b7e1e6ab92..3628ec610c3 100644 --- a/man/ChangeLog +++ b/man/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,7 @@ +2006-03-21 Bill Wohler + + * mh-e.texi (Folders): Various edits. + 2006-03-20 Romain Francoise * gnus.texi (Mail Folders): Grammar fix. diff --git a/man/mh-e.texi b/man/mh-e.texi index 59752927db5..180a093ceb8 100644 --- a/man/mh-e.texi +++ b/man/mh-e.texi @@ -3497,8 +3497,7 @@ ahead and delete or refile the messages, use @kbd{x} (@code{mh-execute-commands}). Many MH-E commands that may affect the numbering of the messages (such as @kbd{F r} or @kbd{F p}) will ask if you want to process refiles or deletes first and then either run -@kbd{x} for you or undo the pending refiles and deletes, which are -lost. +@kbd{x} for you or undo the pending refiles and deletes. @kindex x @vindex mh-after-commands-processed-hook @@ -3552,12 +3551,13 @@ folder for later examination. @kindex t @vindex mh-recenter-summary-flag -When you use @kbd{t} to toggle between show mode and scan mode, the -MH-Show buffer is hidden and the MH-Folder buffer is left alone. -Setting @code{mh-recenter-summary-flag} to a non-@code{nil} value -causes the toggle to display as many scan lines as possible, with the -cursor at the middle. The effect of @code{mh-recenter-summary-flag} is -rather useful, but it can be annoying on a slow network connection. +When you use @kbd{t} to toggle from MH-Folder Show mode to MH-Folder +mode, the MH-Show buffer is hidden and the MH-Folder buffer is left +alone. Setting @code{mh-recenter-summary-flag} to a non-@code{nil} +value causes the toggle to display as many scan lines as possible, +with the cursor at the middle. The effect of +@code{mh-recenter-summary-flag} is rather useful, but it can be +annoying on a slow network connection. @findex mh-visit-folder @kindex F v @@ -3583,8 +3583,6 @@ If you forget where you've refiled your messages, you can find them using @kbd{F s} (@code{mh-search}). @xref{Searching}. @cindex @command{procmail} -@cindex @command{rcvstore} -@cindex MH commands, @command{rcvstore} @cindex @samp{unseen} sequence @cindex sequence, @samp{unseen} @cindex Unix commands, @command{procmail} @@ -3593,14 +3591,14 @@ using @kbd{F s} (@code{mh-search}). @xref{Searching}. @kindex F n @vindex mh-new-messages-folders -If you use a program such as @command{procmail} to use -@command{rcvstore} to file your incoming mail automatically, you can -display new, unseen, messages using the command @kbd{F n} -(@code{mh-index-new-messages}). All messages in the @samp{unseen} -sequence from the folders in @code{mh-new-messages-folders} are -listed. However, this list of folders can be overridden with a prefix -argument: with a prefix argument, enter a space-separated list of -folders, or nothing to search all folders. +If you use a program such as @command{procmail} to file your incoming +mail automatically, you can display new, unseen, messages using the +command @kbd{F n} (@code{mh-index-new-messages}). All messages in the +@samp{unseen} sequence from the folders in +@code{mh-new-messages-folders} are listed. However, this list of +folders can be overridden with a prefix argument: with a prefix +argument, enter a space-separated list of folders, or nothing to +search all folders. @cindex @samp{tick} sequence @cindex sequence, @samp{tick}