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The most basic thing to do with a message is to read it. The way to do this in Rmail is to make the message current. The usual practice is to move sequentially through the file, since this is the order of receipt of messages. When you enter Rmail, you are positioned at the first message that you have not yet made current (that is, the first one that has the ‘unseen’ attribute; see Rmail Attributes). Move forward to see the other new messages; move backward to re-examine old messages.
Move to the next nondeleted message, skipping any
intervening deleted messages
(rmail-next-undeleted-message).
Move to the previous nondeleted message
(rmail-previous-undeleted-message).
Move to the next message, including deleted messages
(rmail-next-message).
Move to the previous message, including deleted messages
(rmail-previous-message).
Move to the next message with the same subject as the
current one (rmail-next-same-subject).
Move to the previous message with the same subject as the
current one (rmail-previous-same-subject).
Move to the first message. With argument n,
move to message number n
(rmail-show-message).
Move to the last message
(rmail-last-message).
Move to the first message
(rmail-first-message).
Move to the next message containing a match for
regexp (rmail-search).
Move to the previous message containing a match for regexp.
n and p are the usual way of moving
among messages in Rmail. They move through the messages
sequentially, but skip over deleted messages, which is usually
what you want to do. Their command definitions are named
rmail-next-undeleted-message and
rmail-previous-undeleted-message. If you do not want
to skip deleted messages—for example, if you want to move
to a message to undelete it—use the variants M-n
and M-p (rmail-next-message and
rmail-previous-message). A numeric argument to any
of these commands serves as a repeat count.
In Rmail, you can specify a numeric argument by typing just the digits. You don’t need to type C-u first.
The M-s (rmail-search) command is
Rmail’s version of search. The usual incremental search
command C-s works in Rmail, but it searches only
within the current message. The purpose of M-s is to
search for another message. It reads a regular expression (see
Regexps) nonincrementally,
then searches starting at the beginning of the following message
for a match. It then selects that message. If regexp
is empty, M-s reuses the regexp used the previous
time.
To search backward in the file for another message, give M-s a negative argument. In Rmail you can do this with - M-s. This begins searching from the end of the previous message.
It is also possible to search for a message based on labels. See Rmail Labels.
The C-c C-n (rmail-next-same-subject)
command moves to the next message with the same subject as the
current one. A prefix argument serves as a repeat count. With a
negative argument, this command moves backward, acting like
C-c C-p (rmail-previous-same-subject).
When comparing subjects, these commands ignore the prefixes
typically added to the subjects of replies.
To move to a message specified by absolute message number, use
j (rmail-show-message) with the message
number as argument. With no argument, j selects the
first message. < (rmail-first-message)
also selects the first message. >
(rmail-last-message) selects the last message.
Next: Rmail Deletion, Previous: Rmail Scrolling, Up: Rmail [Contents][Index]