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These commands all list various slices of the groups available.
gnus-group-list-groups
). If the numeric prefix is used, this
command will list only groups of level ARG and lower. By default, it
only lists groups of level five (i.e.,
gnus-group-default-list-level
) or lower (i.e., just subscribed
groups).
gnus-group-list-all-groups
). If the numeric prefix is used,
this command will list only groups of level ARG and lower. By default,
it lists groups of level seven or lower (i.e., just subscribed and
unsubscribed groups).
gnus-group-list-level
). If given a prefix, also list the groups
with no unread articles.
gnus-group-list-killed
). If given a
prefix argument, really list all groups that are available, but aren't
currently (un)subscribed. This could entail reading the active file
from the server.
gnus-group-list-zombies
).
gnus-group-list-matching
).
gnus-group-list-all-matching
).
gnus-group-list-active
). This
might very well take quite a while. It might actually be a better idea
to do a A M to list all matching, and just give `.' as the
thing to match on. Also note that this command may list groups that
don't exist (yet)---these will be listed as if they were killed groups.
Take the output with some grains of salt.
gnus-group-apropos
).
gnus-group-description-apropos
).
gnus-group-list-cached
).
gnus-group-list-dormant
).
gnus-group-list-limit
).
gnus-group-list-flush
).
gnus-group-list-plus
).
Groups that match the gnus-permanently-visible-groups
regexp will
always be shown, whether they have unread articles or not. You can also
add the visible
element to the group parameters in question to
get the same effect.
Groups that have just ticked articles in it are normally listed in the
group buffer. If gnus-list-groups-with-ticked-articles
is
nil
, these groups will be treated just like totally empty
groups. It is t
by default.
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