From 30366b953dd3bf6c402ad4d6be1fa09360efa92a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jani Nikula Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2015 22:44:04 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Notmuch/Emacs capitalization --- notmuch-emacs.mdwn | 32 ++++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) diff --git a/notmuch-emacs.mdwn b/notmuch-emacs.mdwn index 78fbe42..2e09dd2 100644 --- a/notmuch-emacs.mdwn +++ b/notmuch-emacs.mdwn @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ # Notmuch Emacs Interface One of the more popular Notmuch message reading clients is **notmuch.el**, or -`notmuch-emacs`, an [emacs](http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/) major mode for +`notmuch-emacs`, an [Emacs](http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/) major mode for interacting with Notmuch. It is included in the Notmuch package (`notmuch-emacs` in Debian). @@ -14,34 +14,34 @@ the [[tips and tricks page|emacstips]] for more advanced details. ## Setup Have a look at the [[Howto|howto]] for prerequisites. Be sure you have done the -general setup using the notmuch cli command! +general setup using the Notmuch cli command! -To use the Notmuch emacs mode, first add the following line to your `.emacs` rc +To use the Notmuch Emacs mode, first add the following line to your `.emacs` rc file: (autoload 'notmuch "notmuch" "notmuch mail" t) -or if you always want to load notmuch when you start emacs: +or if you always want to load Notmuch when you start Emacs: (require 'notmuch) Then, either run `emacs -f notmuch`, or execute the command `M-x notmuch` from -within a running emacs. +within a running Emacs. ### Notmuch Emacs configuration file: (Since Notmuch 0.18) -After notmuch is loaded `notmuch-init-file` (typically +After Notmuch is loaded `notmuch-init-file` (typically `~/.emacs.d/notmuch-config.el`) is checked out. If such file exists -it is loaded. Most emacs lisp based configuration not suitable via +it is loaded. Most Emacs lisp based configuration not suitable via customization can be put there instead of `~/.emacs`. ## Navigating & reading mails -When first starting notmuch in emacs, you will be presented with the -notmuch "hello" page. If it exits with an error after writing -"Welcome to notmutch. You have" you need to do the basic notmuch setup +When first starting Notmuch in Emacs, you will be presented with the +Notmuch "hello" page. If it exits with an error after writing +"Welcome to notmuch. You have" you need to do the basic Notmuch setup first (see above). From here you can do searches, see lists of recent searches, saved searches, message tags, help information, etc. @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ displaying the search results. Each line in the search results represents a message thread. Hitting the '?' key will show help for this mode. -In general, the 'q' will kill the current notmuch buffer and return +In general, the 'q' will kill the current Notmuch buffer and return you to the previous buffer (sort of like a 'pop'). In search mode, navigating to a thread and hitting return will then @@ -60,10 +60,10 @@ message contents of the thread. ## Sending mail -In any notmuch mode, you can start a new message by hitting the 'm' +In any Notmuch mode, you can start a new message by hitting the 'm' key. To reply to a message or thread, just hit the 'r' key. -When composing new messages, you will be entered in emacs's +When composing new messages, you will be entered in Emacs's `message-mode`, which is a powerful mode for composing and sending messages. When in message mode, you can type `C-c ?` for help. @@ -73,8 +73,8 @@ messages, see [address completion](#address_completion). When you are ready to send a message, type `C-c C-c`. By default message mode will use your sendmail command to send mail, so make sure that works. One annoying standard configuration of message mode is -that it will hide the sent mail in your emacs frame stack, but it will -not close it. If you type several mails in an emacs session they will +that it will hide the sent mail in your Emacs frame stack, but it will +not close it. If you type several mails in an Emacs session they will accumulate and make switching between buffers more annoying. You can avoid that behavior by adding `(setq message-kill-buffer-on-exit t)` in your `.emacs` file @@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ to have them attached. In Ubuntu this works without any modifications if files are dragged from the file manager. And for those who prefer working from command line, the following -script opens new emacs window with empty message and attaches files +script opens new Emacs window with empty message and attaches files mentioned as script arguments. (Note: The script expects that you have `(server-start)` in your `.emacs` file.) -- 2.43.0