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Or rather, hiding certain things in each article. There usually is much too much cruft in most articles.
gnus-article-hide-headers
). See section 4.1 Hiding Headers.
gnus-article-hide-boring-headers
). See section 4.1 Hiding Headers.
gnus-article-hide-signature
). See section 3.17.10 Article Signature.
gnus-list-identifiers
. These
are strings some mailing list servers add to the beginning of all
Subject
headers--for example, `[zebra 4711]'. Any leading
`Re: ' is skipped before stripping. gnus-list-identifiers
may not contain \\(..\\)
.
gnus-list-identifiers
gnus-article-hide-pem
).
banner
group parameter
(gnus-article-strip-banner
). This is mainly used to hide those
annoying banners and/or signatures that some mailing lists and moderated
groups adds to all the messages. The way to use this function is to add
the banner
group parameter (see section 2.10 Group Parameters) to the
group you want banners stripped from. The parameter either be a string,
which will be interpreted as a regular expression matching text to be
removed, or the symbol signature
, meaning that the (last)
signature should be removed, or other symbol, meaning that the
corresponding regular expression in gnus-article-banner-alist
is
used.
Regardless of a group, you can hide things like advertisements only when
the sender of an article has a certain mail address specified in
gnus-article-address-banner-alist
.
gnus-article-address-banner-alist
(address . banner)
, where address is a regexp
matching a mail address in the From header, banner is one of a
symbol signature
, an item in gnus-article-banner-alist
,
a regexp and nil
. If address matches author's mail
address, it will remove things like advertisements. For example, if a
sender has the mail address `hail@yoo-hoo.co.jp' and there is a
banner something like `Do You Yoo-hoo!?' in all articles he
sends, you can use the following element to remove them:
("@yoo-hoo\\.co\\.jp\\'" . "\n_+\nDo You Yoo-hoo!\\?\n.*\n.*\n") |
gnus-article-hide-citation
). Some variables for
customizing the hiding:
gnus-cited-opened-text-button-line-format
gnus-cited-closed-text-button-line-format
gnus-cited-lines-visible
Hide citation (gnus-article-hide-citation-maybe
) depending on the
following two variables:
gnus-cite-hide-percentage
gnus-cite-hide-absolute
gnus-article-hide-citation-in-followups
). This isn't very
useful as an interactive command, but might be a handy function to stick
have happen automatically (see section 4.3 Customizing Articles).
All these "hiding" commands are toggles, but if you give a negative prefix to these commands, they will show what they have previously hidden. If you give a positive prefix, they will always hide.
Also see section 3.17.1 Article Highlighting for further variables for citation customization.
See section 4.3 Customizing Articles, for how to hide article elements automatically.
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