Giorgos Keramidas <[email protected]> writes: > On Fri, 16 Oct 2009 10:07:56 +0200, Alberto Luaces <[email protected]> wrote: >> Harry Putnam writes: >>> Alberto Luaces writes: >>>> while reading a nnimap folder, sometimes I want to recover the whole >>>> thread for the message I'm reading. I am currently using "A T", that is, >>>> gnus-summary-refer-thread, but nothing happens except the displaying of >>>> "Generating summary...done". Am I doing this correctly? >>> >>> I've had that happen to sometimes... One thing that seems to help here >>> is to reach a little further back into history.. so any messages in >>> your thread that not currently in the buffer... can be reached. >>> >>> Example: C-u 1000 Shift-Z Shift-R >>> >>> will go back 1000 messages... (it may not take nearly so many) then >>> press `A-T' again... see if it helps. >> >> Yes, when I do that, all the messages in the group are shown. Pressing >> `A-T' doesn't seem to do anything special later. Maybe I misunderstood >> the command. I thought that I could recover only the rest of the posts >> of the thread that I'm reading with `A-T' instead of seeing all of them >> with a command like `/o' (gnus-summary-insert-old-articles). > > I often use `/ n' followed by `/ T' to limit summary articles to the > current thread. This seems to pull all the messages of the thread into > the summary buffer, including older ones. > > Then when I'm done I pop the summary limit twice, by typing `/ w / w', > and (optionally) hide the old/deleted messages with `x'. > > Maybe this is more useful than `A T'?
Hi Giorgos, Unfortunately, if I do `/n' followed by `/T', all the messages dissapear from the summary except the one I'm reading. Thanks, Alberto _______________________________________________ info-gnus-english mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english
