@item M P a
@kindex M P a (Summary)
@findex gnus-uu-mark-all
-Mark all articles in series order (@code{gnus-uu-mark-series}).
+Mark all articles in series order (@code{gnus-uu-mark-all}).
@item M P b
@kindex M P b (Summary)
Face used for attribution lines. It is merged with the face for the
cited text belonging to the attribution.
+@item gnus-cite-ignore-quoted-from
+@vindex gnus-cite-ignore-quoted-from
+If non-@code{nil}, no citation highlighting will be performed on lines
+beginning with @samp{>From }. Those lines may have been quoted by MTAs
+in order not to mix up with the envelope From line. The default value
+is @code{t}.
+
@end table
@lisp
(setq message-send-mail-function 'smtpmail-send-it
smtpmail-default-smtp-server "YOUR SMTP HOST")
-;; The following variable needs to be set because of the FLIM version of
-;; smtpmail.el. Which smtpmail.el is used depends on the `load-path'.
-(setq smtp-default-smtp-server "YOUR SMTP HOST")
+;; @r{The following variable needs to be set if you are using smtpmail.el}
+;; @r{distributed with FLIM, lesser than the version 1.14.6.}
+(setq smtp-default-server "YOUR SMTP HOST")
@end lisp
To the thing similar to this, there is
said to @dfn{match}.
Each style may contain an arbitrary amount of @dfn{attributes}. Each
-attribute consists of a @code{(@var{name} @var{value})} pair. The
-attribute name can be one of:
+attribute consists of a @code{(@var{name} @var{value})} pair. In
+addition, you can also use the @code{(@var{name} :file @var{value})}
+form or the @code{(@var{name} :value @var{value})} form. Where
+@code{:file} signifies @var{value} represents a file name and its
+contents should be used as the attribute value, @code{:value} signifies
+@var{value} does not represent a file name explicitly. The attribute
+name can be one of:
@itemize @bullet
@item @code{signature}
("list.\\1" "From:.* \\(.*\\)-list@@majordomo.com")
@end lisp
+@noindent
+In that case, @code{nnmail-split-lowercase-expanded} controls whether
+the inserted text should be made lowercase. @xref{Fancy Mail Splitting}.
+
The second element can also be a function. In that case, it will be
called narrowed to the headers with the first element of the rule as the
argument. It should return a non-@code{nil} value if it thinks that the
up to @samp{\\9} will be substituted with the text matched by the
groupings 1 through 9.
+@vindex nnmail-split-lowercase-expanded
+Where @code{nnmail-split-lowercase-expanded} controls whether the
+lowercase of the matched string should be used for the substitution.
+Setting it as non-@code{nil} is useful to avoid the creation of multiple
+groups when users send to an address using different case
+(i.e. mailing-list@@domain vs Mailing-List@@Domain). The default value
+is @code{t}.
+
@vindex nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words
@code{nnmail-split-fancy-match-partial-words} controls whether partial
words are matched during fancy splitting.
A file containing credentials used to log in on servers. The format is
(almost) the same as the @code{ftp} @file{~/.netrc} file. See the
variable @code{nntp-authinfo-file} for exact syntax; also see
-@ref{NNTP}.
+@ref{NNTP}. An example of an .authinfo line for an IMAP server, is:
+
+@example
+machine students.uio.no login larsi password geheimnis port imap
+@end example
+
+Note that it should be @code{port imap}, or @code{port 143}, if you
+use a @code{nnimap-stream} of @code{tls} or @code{ssl}, even if the
+actual port number used is port 993 for secured IMAP. For
+convenience, Gnus will accept @code{port imaps} as a synonym of
+@code{port imap}.
@item nnimap-need-unselect-to-notice-new-mail
@vindex nnimap-need-unselect-to-notice-new-mail