gnus-home-directorygnus-directoryNote that Gnus is mostly loaded when the
~/.gnus.el file is
read. This means that other directory variables that are
initialized from this variable won't be set properly if you
set this variable in ~/.gnus.el. Set this variable in
.emacs
instead.
gnus-default-directorynil (which is the default), the default directory
will be the default directory of the buffer you were in when
you started Gnus.gnus-verbosegnus-verbose-backendsgnus-verbose, but it applies
to the Gnus back ends instead of Gnus proper.gnus-add-timestamp-to-messagegnus-verbose and
gnus-verbose-backends and are issued. The default
value is nil which means never to add timestamp.
If it is log, add timestamps to only the messages
that go into the ‘*Messages*’ buffer (in XEmacs, it is
the ‘ *Message-Log*’
buffer). If it is neither nil nor
log, add timestamps not only to log messages but
also to the ones displayed in the echo area.nnheader-max-head-lengthnil, there
is no upper read bound. If it is t, the back ends
won't try to read the articles piece by piece, but read the
entire articles. This makes sense with some versions of
ange-ftp or efs.nnheader-head-chop-lengthnnheader-file-name-translation-alist
(setq nnheader-file-name-translation-alist
'((?: . ?_)))
In fact, this is the default value for this variable on
OS/2 and MS Windows (phooey) systems.
gnus-hidden-properties(invisible t intangible t) by default on most
systems, which makes invisible text invisible and
intangible.gnus-parse-headers-hookgnus-shell-command-separatorgnus-invalid-group-regexpIMAP users might want to allow
‘/’ in
group names though.
gnus-safe-html-newsgroupsnil. This overrides
mm-w3m-safe-url-regexp. The default value is
"\\`nnrss[+:]". This is effective only when
emacs-w3m renders html articles, i.e., in the case
mm-text-html-renderer is set to w3m.
See
Display Customization.