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The command RET (mh-show)
displays the message that the cursor is on while
mouse-2 (mh-show-mouse) displays the
message that the mouse cursor is on. If the message is already
displayed, it scrolls to the beginning of the message. Use
SPC (mh-page-msg) and
BS (mh-previous-page) to move
forwards and backwards one page at a time through the message.
You can give either of these commands a prefix argument that
specifies the number of lines to scroll (such as 10
SPC). The SPC
command will also show the next undeleted message if it is used
at the bottom of a message. MH-E normally hides a lot of the
superfluous header fields that mailers add to a message, but if
you wish to see all of them, use the command , (comma;
mh-header-display).
The option mh-show-maximum-size provides an
opportunity to skip over large messages which may be slow to
load. The default value of 0 means that all message are shown
regardless of size.
A litany of options control what displayed messages look like.
First, the appearance of the header fields can be modified by
customizing the associated face: mh-show-to,
mh-show-cc, mh-show-from,
mh-show-date, and mh-show-subject. The
face mh-show-header is used to deemphasize the
other, less interesting, header fields.
Normally messages are delivered with a handful of
uninteresting header fields. These are hidden by turning on the
option mh-clean-message-header-flag (which it is by
default). The header fields listed in the option
mh-invisible-header-fields-default are hidden,
although you can check off any field that you would like to see.
Header fields that you would like to hide that aren’t
listed can be added to the option
mh-invisible-header-fields with a couple of caveats.
Regular expressions are not allowed. Unique fields should have a
‘:’ suffix; otherwise, the element can
be used to render invisible an entire class of fields that start
with the same prefix. If you think a header field should be
generally ignored, please update SF
#245.
MH-E can display the content of
‘Face:’,
‘X-Face:’, and
‘X-Image-URL:’ header fields. If any of
these fields occur in the header of your message, the
sender’s face will appear in the
‘From:’ header field. If more than one
of these fields appear, then the first field found in the order
‘Face:’,
‘X-Face:’, and
‘X-Image-URL:’ will be used. The option
mh-show-use-xface-flag is used to turn this feature
on and off. This feature will be turned on by default if your
system supports it.
The first header field used, if present, is the Gnus-specific ‘Face:’ field14.
Next is the traditional ‘X-Face:’
header field15. MH-E renders the foreground and
background of the image using the associated attributes of the
face mh-show-xface.
Finally, MH-E will display images referenced by the
‘X-Image-URL:’ header field if neither
the ‘Face:’ nor the
‘X-Face:’ fields are present16. Of the
three header fields this is the most efficient in terms of
network usage since the image doesn’t need to be
transmitted with every single mail. The option
mh-fetch-x-image-url controls the fetching of the
‘X-Image-URL:’ header field image with
the following values:
You are prompted before the image is fetched. MH-E will remember your reply and will either use the already fetched image the next time the same URL is encountered or silently skip it if you didn’t fetch it the first time. This is a good setting.
Images are never fetched and only displayed if they are already present in the cache. This is the default.
There isn’t a value of ‘Always Fetch’ for privacy and DOS (denial of service) reasons. For example, fetching a URL can tip off a spammer that you’ve read his email (which is why you shouldn’t blindly answer yes if you’ve set this option to ‘Ask Before Fetching’). Someone may also flood your network and fill your disk drive by sending a torrent of messages, each specifying a unique URL to a very large file.
The cache of images is found in the directory .mhe-x-image-cache within your MH directory. You can add your own face to the ‘From:’ field too. See Picture.
Normally MH-E takes care of displaying messages itself (rather
than calling an MH program to do the work). If you’d rather
have mhl display the message (within MH-E), change
the option mh-mhl-format-file from its default value
of ‘Use Default mhl Format (Printing
Only)’. You can set this option to ‘Use
Default mhl Format’ to get the same output as you
would get if you ran mhl from the shell. If you have
a format file that you want MH-E to use, you can set this option
to ‘Specify an mhl Format File’ and
enter the name of your format file (mhl(1) or
section Using
mhl in the MH book tells you how to write one). Your format
file should specify a non-zero value for
‘overflowoffset’ to allow MH-E to parse
the header. Note that mhl is always used for
printing and forwarding; in this case, the value of
mh-mhl-format-file is consulted if you have
specified a format file.
If the sender of the message has cited other messages in his
message, then MH-E will highlight these citations to emphasize
the sender’s actual response. The option
mh-highlight-citation-style can be customized to
change the highlighting style. The
‘Multicolor’ method uses a different
color for each indentation while the
‘Monotone’ method highlights all
citations in red. To disable highlighting of citations entirely,
choose ‘None’.
Email addresses and URLs in the message are highlighted if the
option goto-address-highlight-p is on, which it is
by default. To view the web page for a highlighted URL or to send
a message using a highlighted email address, use
mouse-2 or C-c RET
(goto-address-at-point). See Sending Mail, to see how to
configure Emacs to send the message using MH-E.
It is a long standing custom to inject body language using a
cornucopia of punctuation, also known as the smileys.
MH-E can render these as graphical widgets if the option
mh-graphical-smileys-flag is turned on, which it is
by default. Smileys include patterns such as :-) and ;-).
Similarly, a few typesetting features are indicated in ASCII text
with certain characters. If your terminal supports it, MH-E can
render these typesetting directives naturally if the option
mh-graphical-emphasis-flag is turned on, which it is
by default. For example, _underline_ will be
underlined,*bold* will appear in bold, /italics/
will appear in italics, and so on. See the option
gnus-emphasis-alist for the whole list. Both of
these options are disabled if the option
mh-decode-mime-flag is turned off. See Viewing
Attachments.
MH-E normally renders signatures and vCards in italics so that
the body of the message stands out more. MH-E depends on the
presence of the signature separator ("-- ")
to do this. You can also customize the face
mh-show-signature so the appearance of the signature
block is more to your liking.
Two hooks can be used to control how messages are displayed.
The first hook, mh-show-mode-hook, is called early
on in the process of the message display. It is usually used to
perform some action on the message’s content. The second
hook, mh-show-hook, is the last thing called after
messages are displayed. It’s used to affect the behavior of
MH-E in general or when mh-show-mode-hook is too
early.
For those who like to modify their mode lines, use
mh-show-buffer-mode-line-buffer-id to modify the
mode line in the MH-Show buffers. Place the two escape strings
‘%s’ and ‘%d’,
which will display the folder name and the message number,
respectively, somewhere in the string in that order. The default
value of "{show-%s} %d" yields a mode line of
-----{show-+inbox} 4 (MH-Show)--Bot--------------------------------
The ‘Face:’ field appeared in GNU Emacs 21 and XEmacs. For more information, see http://quimby.gnus.org/circus/face/.
The display of this field requires the
uncompface program. Recent versions of XEmacs have
internal support for ‘X-Face:’ images.
If your version of XEmacs does not, then you’ll need both
uncompface and the ‘x-face’
package.
The display of the images requires the wget
program to fetch the image and the convert
program from the ImageMagick
suite.
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