I think most Gnus users will want to hit C-k on the groups they don't want to see. The group is then killed.
Gnus has a concept of varying degrees of "liveness" of a group, where level 1 is a very important group, normal (subscribed) groups are at level 3, and unsubscribed corresponds to a level that basically tells Gnus to hide the group but still spend CPU cycles on it. On killed groups, however, Gnus doesn't spend any CPU cycles. IMVHO, using "hidden" for what is now called unsubscribed and "unsubscribed" for what is now called killed would have been more easily understandable. But this is Gnus... FWIW, new (news) groups are normally made zombies, which are just like killed with a green dot so that you can ask Gnus for a list of them. Type 'A z', then browse the list of new groups, subscribe the ones you like and kill all others. In three weeks, you can do it again. Kai PS: Good news: in Gnus, it is easy to kill zombies. [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mihamina Rakotomandimby (R12y)) writes: > Hi, > I subscribed to many Usenet groups, and I made a mistake: I subscribed > to one I shouldn't have. > I said 'u' to unscubscribe, but have one question: > - When the 'U' is displayed on the left of the group name, am I unsubscribed > or not? > - How to make the subscribed-then-unsubcribed group not to appear > anymore? > > Thank you. _______________________________________________ info-gnus-english mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english
