Previous: Generic Marking Commands, Up: Marking Articles [Contents][Index]
Process marks are displayed as # in the summary
buffer, and are used for marking articles in such a way that
other commands will process these articles. For instance, if you
process mark four articles and then use the * command,
Gnus will enter these four articles into the cache. For more
information, see Process/Prefix.
Mark the current article with the process mark
(gnus-summary-mark-as-processable).
Remove the process mark, if any, from the current article
(gnus-summary-unmark-as-processable).
Remove the process mark from all articles
(gnus-summary-unmark-all-processable).
Invert the list of process marked articles
(gnus-uu-invert-processable).
Mark articles that have a Subject header that
matches a regular expression
(gnus-uu-mark-by-regexp).
Unmark articles that have a Subject header
that matches a regular expression
(gnus-uu-unmark-by-regexp).
Mark articles in region
(gnus-uu-mark-region).
Unmark articles in region
(gnus-uu-unmark-region).
Mark all articles in the current (sub)thread
(gnus-uu-mark-thread).
Unmark all articles in the current (sub)thread
(gnus-uu-unmark-thread).
Mark all articles that have a score above the prefix
argument (gnus-uu-mark-over).
Mark all articles in the current series
(gnus-uu-mark-series).
Mark all series that have already had some articles marked
(gnus-uu-mark-sparse).
Mark all articles in series order
(gnus-uu-mark-all).
Mark all articles in the buffer in the order they appear
(gnus-uu-mark-buffer).
Push the current process mark set onto the stack and
unmark all articles
(gnus-summary-kill-process-mark).
Pop the previous process mark set from the stack and
restore it (gnus-summary-yank-process-mark).
Push the current process mark set onto the stack
(gnus-summary-save-process-mark).
Also see the & command in Searching for Articles, for how to set process marks based on article body contents.
Previous: Generic Marking Commands, Up: Marking Articles [Contents][Index]