From 703ae92a5c0acdbea5384b36b78ea341e0b07da1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Konrad Scorciapino <konrad@scorciapino.com> Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2011 16:20:16 -0300 Subject: [PATCH] html rendering --- emacstips.mdwn | 24 ++++++++++++++++++------ 1 file changed, 18 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/emacstips.mdwn b/emacstips.mdwn index 2aed80a..c7e7be4 100644 --- a/emacstips.mdwn +++ b/emacstips.mdwn @@ -174,12 +174,24 @@ useful to you. ## Viewing HTML messages with an external viewer -The emacs client can often display an HTML message inline, but it -sometimes fails for one reason or another, (or is perhaps inadequate -if you really need to see the graphical presentation of the HTML -message). - -In this case, it can be useful to display the message in an external +The emacs client can display an HTML message inline using either the +`html2text` library or some text browser, like w3m or lynx. This is +controlled by the `mm-text-html-renderer` variable. + +The first option is theorically better, because it can generate +strings formatted for emacs and do whatever you want, e.g., substitute +text inside <b> tags for bold text in the buffer. The library, however +is still in a very early development phase and cannot yet process +properly many elements, like tables and <style> directives, and even +the generated text is often poorly formatted. + +Among the available browsers, w3m seems to do a better job converting +the html, and if you have the w3m emacs package, you can use it, +instead of the w3m-standalone, and thus preserve the text formatting. + +But if the rendering fails for one reason or another, (or is perhaps +inadequate if you really need to see the graphical presentation of the +HTML message), it can be useful to display the message in an external viewer, such as a web browser. Here's a little script that Keith Packard wrote, which he calls `view-html`: -- 2.45.2