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Probably the three most common post-yank formatting operations
that you will perform will be the manual citing, reciting, and
unciting of regions of text in the reply buffer. Often you may
want to recite a paragraph to use a nickname, or manually cite a
message when setting sc-cite-region-limit to
nil. The following commands perform these functions
on the region of text between ‘point’
and ‘mark’. Each of them sets the
undo boundary before modifying the region so that the
command can be undone in the standard Emacs way.
Here is the list of Supercite citing commands:
sc-cite-region (C-c C-p c)This command cites each line in the region of text by
interpreting the selected frame from
sc-cite-frame-alist, or the default citing frame
sc-default-cite-frame. It runs the hook
sc-pre-cite-hook before interpreting the frame.
With an optional universal argument (C-u), it
temporarily sets sc-confirm-always-p to
t so you can confirm the attribution string for
a single manual citing. See
Configuring the Citation Engine.
sc-uncite-region (C-c C-p u)This command removes any citation strings from the
beginning of each cited line in the region by interpreting
the selected frame from sc-uncite-frame-alist,
or the default unciting frame
sc-default-uncite-frame. It runs the hook
sc-pre-uncite-hook before interpreting the
frame. See
Configuring the Citation Engine.
sc-recite-region (C-c C-p r)This command recites each line the region by interpreting
the selected frame from sc-recite-frame-alist,
or the default reciting frame
sc-default-recite-frame. It runs the hook
sc-pre-recite-hook before interpreting the
frame. See
Configuring the Citation Engine.
Supercite will always ask you to confirm the attribution
when reciting a region, regardless of the value of
sc-confirm-always-p.
Next: Insertion Commands, Up: Post-yank Formatting Commands [Contents][Index]