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view man/xemacs/reading.texi @ 4597:7191a7b120f1
Some cosmetic namespace cleanup, glyphs.el, coding.el.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2009-01-15 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* coding.el (force-coding-system-equivalency):
Move three functions that we don't want to advertise to being
anonymous lambdas instead.
* glyphs.el :
Remove #'define-constant-glyph and some functions it uses, replace
the latter with anonymous lambdas and the former and its uses with
a call to loop.
Do the same with #'define-obsolete-pointer-glyph and the functions
it uses.
(init-glyphs): Untern this symbol once the associated function has
been called; it's only needed at dump time, not at runtime.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 15 Jan 2009 19:21:43 +0000 |
parents | 712931b4b71d |
children |
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@node Reading Mail, Calendar/Diary, Sending Mail, Top @chapter Reading Mail @cindex mail @cindex message XEmacs provides several mail-reading packages. Each one comes with its own manual, which is included in each package. The recommended mail-reading package for new users is VM. VM works with standard Unix-mail-format folders and was designed as a replacement for the older Rmail. XEmacs also provides a sophisticated and comfortable front-end to the MH mail-processing system, called @samp{MH-E}. Unlike in other mail programs, folders in MH are stored as file-system directories, with each message occupying one (numbered) file. This facilitates working with mail using shell commands, and many other features of MH are also designed to integrate well with the shell and with shell scripts. Keep in mind, however, that in order to use MH-E you must have the MH mail-processing system installed on your computer. The @dfn{Everything including the kitchen sink} package @samp{Gnus} is also available as an XEmacs package. Gnus also handles Usenet articles as well as mail. @samp{MEW} (Messaging in the Emacs World) is another mail-reading package available for XEmacs. Finally, XEmacs provides the Rmail package. Rmail is (currently) the only mail reading package distributed with FSF GNU Emacs, and is powerful in its own right. However, it stores mail folders in a special format called @samp{Babyl}, that is incompatible with all other frequently-used mail programs. A utility program is provided for converting Babyl folders to standard Unix-mail format; however, unless you already have mail in Babyl-format folders, you should consider using Gnus, VM, or MH-E instead.