+2003-05-17 Adrian Aichner <adrian@xemacs.org>
+
+ * emacs-mime.texi (Charset Translation): Ruthless typo fixing.
+ * gnus.texi (Top): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (Selecting a Group): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (Delayed Articles): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (Hiding Headers): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (Getting Mail): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (Comparing Mail Back Ends): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (IMAP): Ditto.
+ * gnus.texi (Required Back End Functions): Ditto.
+ * gnusref.tex (MIMESummary): Ditto.
+ * message.texi (Message Headers): Ditto.
+ * message.texi (Mail Variables): Ditto.
+ * pgg.texi (Prerequisites): Ditto.
+ * pgg.texi (Architecture): Ditto.
+ * pgg.texi (Backend methods): Ditto.
+ * sieve.texi (Managing Sieve): Ditto.
+
2003-05-17 Jesper Harder <harder@ifa.au.dk>
* gnusref.tex (subsection*{Notes}): Fix.
@code{mm-coding-system-priorities} variable though (@pxref{Encoding
Customization}).
-The charset to be used can be overriden by setting the @code{charset}
+The charset to be used can be overridden by setting the @code{charset}
MML tag (@pxref{MML Definition}) when composing the message.
The encoding of characters (quoted-printable, 8bit etc) is orthogonal
* Group Mail Splitting:: \e$B%a!<%kJ,3d$r6nF0$9$k$?$a$K%0%k!<%W%+%9%?%^%$%:$r;H$&\e(B
* Incorporating Old Mail:: \e$B$"$J$?$,;}$C$F$$$k8E$$%a!<%k$r$I$&$9$k$+\e(B?
* Expiring Mail:: \e$BM_$7$/$J$$%a!<%k$r<h$j=|$/\e(B
-* Washing Mail:: \e$B<hF@$7$?%a!<%k$+$i7y$J$b$N$r<h$j=|$/\e(B
+* Washing Mail:: \e$B<hF@$7$?%a!<%k$+$iMW$i$J$$$b$N$r<h$j=|$/\e(B
* Duplicates:: \e$B=EJ#$7$?%a!<%k$r07$&\e(B
* Not Reading Mail:: \e$BB>$N%U%!%$%k$rFI$`$?$a$K%a!<%k%P%C%/%(%s%I$r;H$&\e(B
* Choosing a Mail Back End:: Gnus \e$B$O?'!9$J%a!<%kMM<0$rFI$`;v$,$G$-$k\e(B
@code{d} (\e$BF|\e(B), @code{w} (\e$B=5\e(B), @code{M} (\e$B7n\e(B) \e$B$*$h$S\e(B @code{Y} (\e$BG/\e(B) \e$B$G$9!#\e(B
@item
-\e$BF|IU!#\e(B@code{YYYYY-MM-DD} \e$B$N$h$&$J7A<0$G;XDj$7$^$9!#!#%a%C%;!<%8$NAw?.$O\e(B
-\e$B$=$NF|$NFCDj$N;~9o\e(B (\e$B%G%#%U%)%k%H$O\e(B 8 \e$B;~\e(B) \e$B$^$GCY$i$;$i$l$^$9!#\e(B
+\e$BF|IU!#\e(B@code{YYYY-MM-DD} \e$B$N$h$&$J7A<0$G;XDj$7$^$9!#!#%a%C%;!<%8$NAw?.$O$=\e(B
+\e$B$NF|$NFCDj$N;~9o\e(B (\e$B%G%#%U%)%k%H$O\e(B 8 \e$B;~\e(B) \e$B$^$GCY$i$;$i$l$^$9!#\e(B
@code{gnus-delay-default-hour} \e$B$b;2>H$7$F2<$5$$!#\e(B
@item
* Group Mail Splitting:: \e$B%a!<%kJ,3d$r6nF0$9$k$?$a$K%0%k!<%W%+%9%?%^%$%:$r;H$&\e(B
* Incorporating Old Mail:: \e$B$"$J$?$,;}$C$F$$$k8E$$%a!<%k$r$I$&$9$k$+\e(B?
* Expiring Mail:: \e$BM_$7$/$J$$%a!<%k$r<h$j=|$/\e(B
-* Washing Mail:: \e$B<hF@$7$?%a!<%k$+$i7y$J$b$N$r<h$j=|$/\e(B
+* Washing Mail:: \e$B<hF@$7$?%a!<%k$+$iMW$i$J$$$b$N$r<h$j=|$/\e(B
* Duplicates:: \e$B=EJ#$7$?%a!<%k$r07$&\e(B
* Not Reading Mail:: \e$BB>$N%U%!%$%k$rFI$`$?$a$K%a!<%k%P%C%/%(%s%I$r;H$&\e(B
* Choosing a Mail Back End:: Gnus \e$B$O?'!9$J%a!<%kMM<0$rFI$`;v$,$G$-$k\e(B
* Group Mail Splitting:: Use group customize to drive mail splitting.
* Incorporating Old Mail:: What about the old mail you have?
* Expiring Mail:: Getting rid of unwanted mail.
-* Washing Mail:: Removing gruft from the mail you get.
+* Washing Mail:: Removing cruft from the mail you get.
* Duplicates:: Dealing with duplicated mail.
* Not Reading Mail:: Using mail back ends for reading other files.
* Choosing a Mail Back End:: Gnus can read a variety of mail formats.
@vindex gnus-large-newsgroup
The @code{gnus-large-newsgroup} variable says what Gnus should
consider to be a big group. If it is @code{nil}, no groups are
-considered big. The default vaule is 200. If the group has more
+considered big. The default value is 200. If the group has more
(unread and/or ticked) articles than this, gnus will query the user
before entering the group. The user can then specify how many
articles should be fetched from the server. If the user specifies a
(months) and @code{Y} (years).
@item
-A specific date. Looks like @code{YYYYY-MM-DD}. The message will be
+A specific date. Looks like @code{YYYY-MM-DD}. The message will be
delayed until that day, at a specific time (eight o'clock by default).
See also @code{gnus-delay-default-hour}.
name.
@item to-address
Remove the @code{To} header if it only contains the address identical to
-the current groups's @code{to-address} parameter.
+the current group's @code{to-address} parameter.
@item to-list
Remove the @code{To} header if it only contains the address identical to
-the current groups's @code{to-list} parameter.
+the current group's @code{to-list} parameter.
@item cc-list
Remove the @code{CC} header if it only contains the address identical to
-the current groups's @code{to-list} parameter.
+the current group's @code{to-list} parameter.
@item date
Remove the @code{Date} header if the article is less than three days
old.
* Group Mail Splitting:: Use group customize to drive mail splitting.
* Incorporating Old Mail:: What about the old mail you have?
* Expiring Mail:: Getting rid of unwanted mail.
-* Washing Mail:: Removing gruft from the mail you get.
+* Washing Mail:: Removing cruft from the mail you get.
* Duplicates:: Dealing with duplicated mail.
* Not Reading Mail:: Using mail back ends for reading other files.
* Choosing a Mail Back End:: Gnus can read a variety of mail formats.
Since maildirs don't require locking for delivery, the maildirs you use
as groups can also be the maildirs your mail is directly delivered to.
-This means you can skip Gnus's mail splitting if your mail is already
+This means you can skip Gnus' mail splitting if your mail is already
organized into different mailboxes during delivery. A @code{directory}
entry in @code{mail-sources} would have a similar effect, but would
require one set of mailboxes for spooling deliveries (in mbox format,
@item nnimap-expunge-on-close
@cindex expunging
@vindex nnimap-expunge-on-close
-Unlike Parmenides the @acronym{IMAP} designers has decided that things that
-doesn't exist actually does exist. More specifically, @acronym{IMAP} has
+Unlike Parmenides the @acronym{IMAP} designers have decided things that
+don't exist actually do exist. More specifically, @acronym{IMAP} has
this concept of marking articles @code{Deleted} which doesn't actually
delete them, and this (marking them @code{Deleted}, that is) is what
nnimap does when you delete an article in Gnus (with @kbd{B DEL} or
If @var{server} is the current virtual server, and the connection to the
physical server is alive, then this function should return a
-non-@code{nil} vlue. This function should under no circumstances
+non-@code{nil} value. This function should under no circumstances
attempt to reconnect to a server we have lost connection to.
There should be no data returned.
K $\mid$ & Pipe the MIME part to an external command.\\
K b & Make all the MIME parts have buttons in front of them.\\
K m & Try to repair {\bf multipart-headers}.\\
- K C & View the MIME part using a differenct {\bf charset}.\\
+ K C & View the MIME part using a different {\bf charset}.\\
X m & Save all parts matching a MIME type to a directory. [p/p]\\
M-t & Toggle the buttonized display of the article buffer.\\
W M w & Decode RFC2047-encoded words in the article headers.\\
\end{keys}
The four letters stand for:\\*
\quad \B{A}ction: I)ncrease, L)ower;\\*
- \quad \B{p}art: a)utor (from), s)ubject, x)refs (cross-posting), d)ate, l)ines,
+ \quad \B{p}art: a)uthor (from), s)ubject, x)refs (cross-posting), d)ate, l)ines,
message-i)d, t)references (parent), f)ollowup, b)ody, h)ead (all headers);\\*
\quad \B{m}atch type:\\*
\qquad string: s)ubstring, e)xact, r)egexp, f)uzzy,\\*
C-c C-f C-d & Move to \textbf{Distribution:}.\\
C-c C-f C-m & Move to \textbf{Mail-Followup-To:}.\\
C-c C-f C-o & Move to \textbf{From:}.\\
- C-c C-f C-a & Insert a resonable \textbf{Mail-Followup-To:} for
+ C-c C-f C-a & Insert a reasonable \textbf{Mail-Followup-To:} for
an unsubscribed list. [Prefix: include addresses in \textbf{Cc:}]\\
C-c C-f TAB & (C-c C-u) Move to \textbf{Importance:}.\\
C-c M-n & Insert \textbf{Disposition-Notification-To:}
C-c C-m m & Insert \textbf{multi}-part.\\
C-c C-m q & \textbf{Quote} region.\\
C-c C-m c s & Encrypt message using \textbf{S/MIME}.\\
- C-c C-m c o & Encrypt message usging PGP.\\
+ C-c C-m c o & Encrypt message using PGP.\\
C-c C-m c p & Encrypt message using \textbf{PGP/MIME}.\\
C-c C-m s s & Sign message using \textbf{S/MIME}.\\
C-c C-m s o & Sign message using PGP.\\
@item message-mailer-swallows-blank-line
@vindex message-mailer-swallows-blank-line
\e$B%7%9%F%`$N%a%$%i!<$,%X%C%@!<$HK\J8$r0l=o$K$7$F$7$^$&>l9g$O!"\e(B
-\e$BHs\e(B-@code{nil} \e$B$K@_Dj$7$F2<$5$$!#\e(B(Sunos 4 \e$B$G\e(B sendmail \e$B$,%j%b!<%H%b!<%I$G\e(B
+\e$BHs\e(B-@code{nil} \e$B$K@_Dj$7$F2<$5$$!#\e(B(SunOS 4 \e$B$G\e(B sendmail \e$B$,%j%b!<%H%b!<%I$G\e(B
\e$BF0:n$9$k>l9g$,3:Ev$7$^$9!#\e(B) \e$BCM$O!">c32$,<B:]$K5/$-$k$+$I$&$+$r%F%9%H$9$k\e(B
\e$B$?$a$N<0$K$9$Y$-$G$9!#\e(B
is @emph{not} an abbreviation of the English word ``response'', but is
Latin, and means ``in response to''. Some illiterate nincompoops have
failed to grasp this fact, and have ``internationalized'' their software
-to use abonimations like @samp{Aw: } (``antwort'') or @samp{Sv: }
+to use abominations like @samp{Aw: } (``antwort'') or @samp{Sv: }
(``svar'') instead, which is meaningless and evil. However, you may
have to deal with users that use these evil tools, in which case you may
set this variable to a regexp that matches these prefixes. Myself, I
@item message-mailer-swallows-blank-line
@vindex message-mailer-swallows-blank-line
Set this to non-@code{nil} if the system's mailer runs the header and
-body together. (This problem exists on Sunos 4 when sendmail is run
+body together. (This problem exists on SunOS 4 when sendmail is run
in remote mode.) The value should be an expression to test whether
the problem will actually occur.
RET}, which queries the user for a server and if necessary, user
credentials to use.
-When a server has been succesfully contacted, the Manage Sieve buffer
+When a server has been successfully contacted, the Manage Sieve buffer
looks something like:
@example