When you cite an original message, you can tell Supercite
which part of the author's name you would prefer it to use as the
attribution. The variable
sc-preferred-attribution-list controls this; it
contains keys which are matched against the attribution alist in
the given order. The first value of a key that produces a
non-nil, non-empty string match is used as the
attribution string, and if no keys match, a secondary mechanism
is used to generate the attribution. See Anonymous
Attributions.
The following preferences are always available in the attribution alist (barring error):
"emailname""initials""firstname""lastname""middlename-1""sc-lastchoice""sc-consult"sc-attrib-selection-list
which can be used to select special attributions based on the
value of any info key. See below for details."x-attribution"Middle name indexes can be any positive integer greater than zero, though it is unlikely that many authors will have more than one middle name, if that many.
At this point, let me digress into a discussion of etiquette. It is my belief that while the style of the citations is a reflection of the personal tastes of the replier (i.e., you), the attribution selection is ultimately the personal choice of the original author. In a sense it is his or her “net nickname”, and therefore the author should have some say in the selection of attribution string. Imagine how you would feel if someone gave you a nickname that you didn't like?
For this reason, Supercite recognizes a special mail header,
‘X-Attribution:’, which if present,
tells Supercite the attribution string preferred by the original
author. It is the value of this header that is associated with
the "x-attribution" key in the attribution alist.
Currently, you can override the preference of this key by
changing sc-preferred-attribution-list, but that
isn't polite, and in the future Supercite may hard-code this. For
now, it is suggested that if you change the order of the keys in
this list, that "x-attribution" always be first, or
possible second behind only "sc-lastchoice". This
latter is the default.
The
value "sc-consult" in
sc-preferred-attribution-list has a special meaning
during attribution selection. When Supercite encounters this
preference, it begins processing a customizable list of
attributions, contained in the variable
sc-attrib-selection-list. Each element in this list
contains lists of the following form:
(infokey ((regexp . attribution)
(regexp . attribution)
(...)))
where
infokey is a key for sc-mail-field and
regexp is a regular expression to match against the
infokey's value. If regexp matches the
infokey's value, the attribution is used as
the attribution string. Actually, attribution can be a
string or a list; if it is a list, it is evaluated
and the return value (which must be a string), is used as the
attribution.
This can be very useful for when you are replying to net acquaintances who do not use the ‘X-Attribution:’ mail header. You may know what nickname they would prefer to use, and you can set up this list to match against a specific mail field, e.g., ‘From:’, allowing you to cite your friend's message with the appropriate attribution.