Commands for composing a mail message:
gnus-summary-reply).gnus-summary-reply-with-original). This command
uses the process/prefix convention.gnus-summary-wide-reply). A wide reply
is a reply that goes out to all people listed in the
To, From (or Reply-to)
and Cc headers. If Mail-Followup-To
is present, that's used instead.gnus-summary-wide-reply-with-original).
This command uses the process/prefix convention, but only uses
the headers from the first article to determine the
recipients.gnus-summary-wide-reply). A very wide
reply is a reply that goes out to all people listed in
the To, From (or
Reply-to) and Cc headers in all the
process/prefixed articles. This command uses the process/prefix
convention.gnus-summary-very-wide-reply-with-original). This
command uses the process/prefix convention.Reply-To field
(gnus-summary-reply-broken-reply-to). If you need
this because a mailing list incorrectly sets a
Reply-To header pointing to the list, you probably
want to set the broken-reply-to group parameter
instead, so things will work correctly. See Group
Parameters.Reply-To field
(gnus-summary-reply-broken-reply-to-with-original).gnus-summary-mail-forward). If no prefix is
given, the message is forwarded according to the value of
(message-forward-as-mime) and
(message-forward-show-mml); if the prefix is 1,
decode the message and forward directly inline; if the prefix
is 2, forward message as an rfc822 MIME
section; if the prefix is 3, decode message and forward as an
rfc822 MIME section; if the prefix is 4,
forward message directly inline; otherwise, the message is
forwarded as no prefix given but use the flipped value of
(message-forward-as-mime). By default, the message
is decoded and forwarded as an rfc822 MIME
section.gnus-summary-mail-other-window).
By default, use the posting style of the current group. If
given a prefix, disable that. If the prefix is 1, prompt for a
group name to find the posting style.gnus-summary-news-other-window). By
default, post to the current group. If given a prefix,
disable that. If the prefix is 1, prompt for a group to post
to.
This function actually prepares a news even when using
mail groups. This is useful for “posting”
messages to mail groups without actually sending them over
the network: they're just saved directly to the group in
question. The corresponding back end must have a request-post
method for this to work though.
gnus-summary-resend-bounced-mail). You will be
popped into a mail buffer where you can edit the headers before
sending the mail off again. If you give a prefix to this
command, and the bounced mail is a reply to some other mail,
Gnus will try to fetch that mail and display it for easy
perusal of its headers. This might very well fail,
though.gnus-summary-resend-message will prompt you for
an address to send the current message off to, and then send
it to that place. The headers of the message won't be
altered—but lots of headers that say
Resent-To, Resent-From and so on
will be added. This means that you actually send a mail to
someone that has a To header that (probably)
points to yourself. This will confuse people. So, natcherly
you'll only do that if you're really eVIl.
This command is mainly used if you have several accounts
and want to ship a mail to a different account of yours. (If
you're both root and postmaster and
get a mail for postmaster to the
root account, you may want to resend it to
postmaster. Ordnung muss sein!
This command understands the process/prefix convention
(see Process/Prefix).
gnus-uu-digest-mail-forward). This command uses
the process/prefix convention (see Process/Prefix).gnus-summary-mail-crosspost-complaint).
This command
is provided as a way to fight back against the current
crossposting pandemic that's sweeping Usenet. It will compose
a reply using the gnus-crosspost-complaint
variable as a preamble. This command understands the
process/prefix convention (see Process/Prefix)
and will prompt you before sending each mail.
Also See Header Commands, for more information.