mh-e: Processing Mail Tour

 
 3.3 Processing Mail
 ===================
 
 The first thing we want to do is reply to the message that we sent
 ourselves.  Ensure that the cursor is still on the same line as your
 test message and type ‘r’.  You are prompted in the minibuffer with
 ‘Reply to whom:’.  Here MH-E is asking whether you’d like to reply to
 the original sender only, to the sender and primary recipients, or to
 the sender and all recipients.  You can press <TAB> to see these
 choices.  If you simply press <RET>, you’ll reply only to the sender.
 Press <RET> now.
 
    You’ll find yourself in an Emacs buffer similar to that when you were
 sending the original message, like this:
 
      To:
      cc:
      Subject: Re: Test
      In-reply-to: <31054.1142621351@stop.mail-abuse.org>
      References: <31054.1142621351@stop.mail-abuse.org>
      Comments: In-reply-to Bill Wohler <wohler@stop.mail-abuse.org>
         message dated "Fri, 17 Mar 2006 10:49:11 -0800."
      X-Mailer: MH-E 8.1; nmh 1.1; GNU Emacs 23.1
      --------
      #
 
      --:--  {draft}  All L10     (MH-Letter)----------------------------------
      To: wohler
      Subject: Test
      X-Mailer: MH-E 8.1; nmh 1.1; GNU Emacs 23.1
      Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2006 10:49:11 -0800
      From: Bill Wohler <wohler@stop.mail-abuse.org>
 
      This is a test message to get the wheels churning...
 
      --:--  {show-+inbox} 4   All L1     (MH-Show)----------------------------
      Type C-c C-c to send message, C-c ? for help
    Composition window during reply
 
    By default, MH will not add you to the address list of your replies,
 so if you find that the ‘To:’ header field is missing, don’t worry.  In
 this case, type ‘C-c C-f C-t’ to create and go to the ‘To:’ field, where
 you can type your login name again.  You can move around with the arrow
 keys or with ‘C-p’ (‘previous-line’), ‘C-n’ (‘next-line’), ‘C-b’
 (‘backward-char’), and ‘C-f’ (‘forward-char’) and can delete the
 previous character with <BS>.  When you’re finished editing your
 message, send it with ‘C-c C-c’ as before.
 
    You’ll often want to save messages that were sent to you in an
 organized fashion.  This is done with “folders”.  You can use folders to
 keep messages from your friends, or messages related to a particular
 topic.  With your cursor in the MH-Folder buffer and positioned on the
 message you sent to yourself, type ‘o’ to output (‘refile’ in MH
 parlance) that message to a folder.  Enter ‘test’ at the ‘Destination
 folder:’ prompt and type ‘y’ (or <SPC>) when MH-E asks to create the
 folder ‘+test’.  Note that a ‘^’ (caret) appears next to the message
 number, which means that the message has been marked for refiling but
 has not yet been refiled.  We’ll talk about how the refile is actually
 carried out in a moment.
 
    Your previous reply is now waiting in the system mailbox.  You
 incorporate this mail into your MH-Folder buffer named ‘+inbox’ with the
 ‘i’ command.  Do this now.  After the mail is incorporated, use ‘n’ or
 ‘p’ to move the cursor to the new message, and read it with <RET>.
 Let’s delete this message by typing ‘d’.  Note that a ‘D’ appears next
 to the message number.  This means that the message is marked for
 deletion but is not yet deleted.  To perform the deletion (and the
 refile we did previously), use the ‘x’ command.
 
    If you want to send another message you can use ‘m’ instead of ‘M-x
 mh-smail’.  So go ahead, send some mail to your friends!
 
    You can get a quick reminder about these commands by typing ‘?’.
 This lists several “prefix characters”.  To list the commands available
 via the prefix characters, type the prefix character followed by a ‘?’,
 for example, ‘F ?’.  More complete help is available with the ‘C-h m’
 (‘describe-mode’) command.