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There are specs for highlighting, and these are shared by all the format
variables. Text inside the `%(' and `%)' specifiers will get
the special mouse-face
property set, which means that it will be
highlighted (with gnus-mouse-face
) when you put the mouse pointer
over it.
Text inside the `%{' and `%}' specifiers will have their
normal faces set using gnus-face-0
, which is bold
by
default. If you say `%1{', you'll get gnus-face-1
instead,
and so on. Create as many faces as you wish. The same goes for the
mouse-face
specs--you can say `%3(hello%)' to have
`hello' mouse-highlighted with gnus-mouse-face-3
.
Text inside the `%<<' and `%>>' specifiers will get the
special balloon-help
property set to
gnus-balloon-face-0
. If you say `%1<<', you'll get
gnus-balloon-face-1
and so on. The gnus-balloon-face-*
variables should be either strings or symbols naming functions that
return a string. When the mouse passes over text with this property
set, a balloon window will appear and display the string. Please
refer to section `Tooltips' in The Emacs Manual,
(in GNU Emacs) or the doc string of balloon-help-mode
(in
XEmacs) for more information on this. (For technical reasons, the
guillemets have been approximated as `<<' and `>>' in this
paragraph.)
Here's an alternative recipe for the group buffer:
;; Create three face types.
(setq gnus-face-1 'bold)
(setq gnus-face-3 'italic)
;; We want the article count to be in
;; a bold and green face. So we create
;; a new face called |
I'm sure you'll be able to use this scheme to create totally unreadable and extremely vulgar displays. Have fun!
Note that the `%(' specs (and friends) do not make any sense on the mode-line variables.
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