a...@koldfront.dk (Adam Sjøgren) writes:
>
> What happens if you in the *Group* buffer press "^" to get to the
> *Server* buffer - does it contain the new nntp server?
Yes the nntp server is listed in the server buffer.
>
> If you type RET with point in the new nntp server, you should be able to
Benjamin Slade writes:
> A few issues I'm stuck on. Partially owing to using multiple accounts,
> perhaps.
>
> (1) Splitting mail with multiple accounts.
> I have this in my .gnus.el:
>
> ;; mail splitting
> (setq nnimap-split-inbox "INBOX")
> (setq nnimap-split-predicate "UNDELETED")
> (setq n
A few issues I'm stuck on. Partially owing to using multiple accounts,
perhaps.
(1) Splitting mail with multiple accounts.
I have this in my .gnus.el:
;; mail splitting
(setq nnimap-split-inbox "INBOX")
(setq nnimap-split-predicate "UNDELETED")
(setq nnmail-split-fancy ;;
'(|
Some entity, AKA a...@koldfront.dk (Adam Sjøgren),
wrote this mindboggling stuff:
(selectively-snipped-or-not-p)
> B.V. writes:
>
>> How about trying "^\\[git/adm\\].*" vs "^Re: \\[git/adm\\].*"
>> I have myself not tried it. But I think the regexp should work!
>
> Adding the ^
B.V. writes:
> How can i fetch news from an nntp server added as secondary source to
> gnus?
What happens if you in the *Group* buffer press "^" to get to the
*Server* buffer - does it contain the new nntp server?
If you type RET with point in the new nntp server, you should be able to
subscribe
Adam writes:
> Adding the ^ doesn't work, but your suggestion gave me the idea of
> having something that matches "Re: [git/adm]" first, and then the usual
> rule after. That works. Although it feels a little kludgey.
I found an entry in my fancy splitting rules that I had forgotten all
about. Th
Hi,
I am using built-in gnus 5.13 with emacs 24.5
There are two nntp servers from which I want to fetch news. I have them
in my gnus.el in the following manner.
(setq gnus-select-method
'(nntp "gmane"
(nntp-address "news.gmane.org")
))
(add-to
B.V. writes:
> How about trying "^\\[git/adm\\].*" vs "^Re: \\[git/adm\\].*"
> I have myself not tried it. But I think the regexp should work!
Adding the ^ doesn't work, but your suggestion gave me the idea of
having something that matches "Re: [git/adm]" first, and then the u