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1\input texinfo @comment -*-texinfo-*-
2@comment 3.47
3@comment %**start of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
4@setfilename ../info/sc
5@settitle Supercite Version 3.1 User's Manual
6@iftex
7@finalout
8@end iftex
9
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10@c @setchapternewpage odd % For book style double sided manual.
11@comment %**end of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
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12
13@copying
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14This document describes the Supercite Version 3.1 package for citing and
15attributing the replies for various GNU Emacs mail and news reading
16subsystems.
17
18f952d5 18Copyright @copyright{} 1993, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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18f952d5 20@quotation
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21Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
22under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
23any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
24Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU
25Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the
26license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation
27License'' in the Emacs manual.
6bf7aab6 28
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29(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
30this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
31Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
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33This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free
34Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document
35separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the
36license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license.
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37@end quotation
38@end copying
39
40@c @smallbook
41
42@dircategory Emacs
43@direntry
177c0ea7 44* SC: (sc). Supercite lets you cite parts of messages you're
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45 replying to, in flexible ways.
46@end direntry
47
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48@titlepage
49@sp 6
50@center @titlefont{Supercite User's Manual}
51@sp 2
52@center @titlefont{Supercite Version 3.1}
53@sp 4
54@center Manual Revision: 3.47
55@center August 1993
56@sp 5
57@center Barry A@. Warsaw
58@center @t{bwarsaw@@cen.com}
59@center @t{@dots{}!uunet!cen.com!bwarsaw}
60@page
61@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
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6bf7aab6 63@end titlepage
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64
65@ifnottex
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66@node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir)
67@comment node-name, next, previous, up
68
69This document describes the Supercite Version 3.1 package for citing and
70attributing the replies for various GNU Emacs mail and news reading
71subsystems. The manual is divided into the following chapters.
72
73@menu
74* Introduction::
75* Citations::
76* Getting Connected::
77* Replying and Yanking::
78* Selecting an Attribution::
79* Configuring the Citation Engine::
80* Post-yank Formatting Commands::
81* Information Keys and the Info Alist::
82* Reference Headers::
83* Hints to MUA Authors::
84* Version 3 Changes::
85* Thanks and History::
86* The Supercite Mailing List::
87
88* Concept Index::
89* Command Index::
90* Key Index::
91* Variable Index::
92@end menu
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93@end ifnottex
94
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95
96@node Introduction, Usage Overview, Top, Top
97@comment node-name, next, previous, up
98@chapter Introduction
99@ifinfo
100
101@end ifinfo
102Supercite version 3.1 is a GNU Emacs package written entirely in Emacs
103Lisp. It interfaces to most of the commonly used Emacs mail user agents
104(@dfn{MUAs}) and news user agents (@dfn{NUAs}), and provides
105sophisticated facilities for the citing and attributing of message
106replies. Supercite has a very specific and limited role in the process
107of composing replies to both USENET network news and electronic mail.
108
109The preferred way to spell Supercite is with a capital @samp{S},
110lowercase @samp{upercite}. There are a few alternate spellings out there
111and I won't be terribly offended if you use them. People often ask
112though@dots{}
113
114@ifinfo
115@menu
116* Usage Overview::
117* What Supercite Does Not Do::
118* What Supercite Does::
119@end menu
120@end ifinfo
121
122@cindex MUA
123@cindex NUA
124Supercite is only useful in conjunction with MUAs and NUAs such as VM,
125GNUS, RMAIL, etc@. (hereafter referred to collectively as MUAs).
126Supercite is typically called by the MUA after a reply buffer has been
127setup. Thereafter, Supercite's many commands and formatting styles are
128available in that reply buffer until the reply is sent. Supercite is
129re-initialized in each new reply buffer.
130
131Supercite is currently at major revision 3.1, and is known to work in the
132following environments:
133
134@table @asis
135@item Emacs versions:
136 GNU Emacs 18.57 through 18.59, all Emacs 19,
137 all current Lucid Emacs, and Epoch 4.@refill
138
139@item MUAs:
140 VM 4.37 and beyond (including VM version 5), RMAIL, MH-E 3.7 and
141 beyond, PCMAIL.@refill
142
143@item NUAs:
144 RNEWS, GNUS 3.12 and beyond, GNEWS.@refill
145
146@end table
147For systems with version numbers, all known subsequent versions also
148work with Supercite. For those systems without version numbers,
149Supercite probably works with any recently released version. Note that
150only some of these systems will work with Supercite ``out of the box.''
151All others must overload interfacing routines to supply the necessary
152glue. @xref{Getting Connected}, for more details.@refill
153
154
155@node Usage Overview, What Supercite Does Not Do, Introduction, Introduction
156@comment node-name, next, previous, up
157@kindex r
158@kindex f
159@kindex C-c C-y
160@cindex yank
161@cindex cite, citing
162@cindex attribute, attributing
163@comment
164@section Usage Overview
165@ifinfo
166
167@end ifinfo
168Typical usage is as follows. You want to reply or followup to a message
169in your MUA. You will probably hit @kbd{r} (i.e., ``reply'') or @kbd{f}
170(i.e., ``forward'') to begin composing the reply. In response, the MUA
171will create a reply buffer and initialize the outgoing mail headers
172appropriately. The body of the reply will usually be empty at this
173point. You now decide that you would like to include part of the
174original message in your reply. To do this, you @dfn{yank} the original
175message into the reply buffer, typically with a key stroke such as
176@kbd{C-c C-y}. This sequence will invoke an MUA-specific function which
177fills the body of the reply with the original message and then
178@dfn{attributes} this text to its author. This is called @dfn{citing}
179and its effect is to prefix every line from the original message with a
180special text tag. Most MUAs provide some default style of citing; by
181using Supercite you gain a wider flexibility in the look and style of
182citations. Supercite's only job is to cite the original message.
183
184@node What Supercite Does Not Do, What Supercite Does, Usage Overview, Introduction
185@comment node-name, next, previous, up
186@section What Supercite Doesn't Do
187@ifinfo
188
189@end ifinfo
190Because of this clear division of labor, there are useful features which
191are the sole responsibility of the MUA, even though it might seem that
192Supercite should provide them. For example, many people would like to
193be able to yank (and cite) only a portion of the original message.
194Since Supercite only modifies the text it finds in the reply buffer as
195set up by the MUA, it is the MUA's responsibility to do partial yanking.
196@xref{Reply Buffer Initialization}.@refill
197
198@vindex mail-header-separator
199@comment
200Another potentially useful thing would be for Supercite to set up the
201outgoing mail headers with information it gleans from the reply buffer.
202But by previously agreed upon convention, any text above the
203@code{mail-header-separator} which separates mail headers from message
204bodies cannot be modified by Supercite. Supercite, in fact, doesn't
205know anything about the meaning of these headers, and never ventures
206outside the designated region. @xref{Hints to MUA Authors}, for more
207details.@refill
208
209@node What Supercite Does, Citations, What Supercite Does Not Do, Introduction
210@comment node-name, next, previous, up
211@findex sc-cite-original
212@section What Supercite Does
213@ifinfo
214
215@end ifinfo
216Supercite is invoked for the first time on a reply buffer via your MUA's
217reply or forward command. This command will actually perform citations
218by calling a hook variable to which Supercite's top-level function
219@code{sc-cite-original} has been added. When @code{sc-cite-original} is
220executed, the original message must be set up in a very specific way,
221but this is handled automatically by the MUA. @xref{Hints to MUA
222Authors}.@refill
223
224@cindex info alist
225The first thing Supercite does, via @code{sc-cite-original}, is to parse
226through the original message's mail headers. It saves this data in an
227@dfn{information association list}, or @dfn{info alist}. The information
228in this list is used in a number of places throughout Supercite.
229@xref{Information Keys and the Info Alist}.@refill
230
231@cindex nuking mail headers
232@cindex reference header
233After the mail header info is extracted, the headers are optionally
234removed (@dfn{nuked}) from the reply. Supercite then writes a
235@dfn{reference header} into the buffer. This reference header is a
236string carrying details about the citation it is about to perform.
237
238@cindex modeline
239Next, Supercite visits each line in the reply, transforming the line
44df92db 240according to a customizable ``script.'' Lines which were not previously
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241cited in the original message are given a citation, while already cited
242lines remain untouched, or are coerced to your preferred style.
243Finally, Supercite installs a keymap into the reply buffer so that you
244have access to Supercite's post-yank formatting and reciting commands as
245you subsequently edit your reply. You can tell that Supercite has been
246installed into the reply buffer because that buffer's modeline will
247display the minor mode string @samp{SC}.
248
249@cindex filladapt
250@cindex gin-mode
251@vindex fill-prefix
252@findex fill-paragraph
253@comment
254When the original message is cited by @code{sc-cite-original}, it will
255(optionally) be filled by Supercite. However, if you manually edit the
256cited text and want to re-fill it, you must use an add-on package such
257as @cite{filladapt} or @cite{gin-mode}. These packages can recognize
258Supercited text and will fill them appropriately. Emacs' built-in
259filling routines, e.g@. @code{fill-paragraph}, do not recognize cited
260text and will not re-fill them properly because it cannot guess the
261@code{fill-prefix} being used.
262@xref{Post-yank Formatting Commands}, for details.@refill
263
264As mentioned above, Supercite provides commands to recite or uncite
265regions of text in the reply buffer, and commands to perform other
266beautifications on the cited original text, maintaining consistent and
267informative citations throughout. Supercite tries to be as configurable
268as possible to allow for a wide range of personalized citation styles,
269but it is also immediately useful with the default configuration, once
270it has been properly connected to your MUA. @xref{Getting Connected},
271for more details.@refill
272
273@node Citations, Citation Elements, What Supercite Does, Top
274@comment node-name, next, previous, up
275@cindex nested citations
276@cindex citation
277@comment
278@chapter Citations
279@ifinfo
280
281@end ifinfo
282A @dfn{citation} is the acknowledgement of the original author of a mail
283message in the body of the reply. There are two basic citation styles
284which Supercite supports. The first, called @dfn{nested citations} is
285an anonymous form of citation; in other words, an indication is made
286that the cited line was written by someone @emph{other} that the current
287message author (i.e., other than you, the person composing the reply),
288but no reference is made as to the identity of the original author.
289This style should look familiar since its use on the net is widespread.
290Here's an example of what a message buffer would look like using nested
291citations after multiple replies:
292
293@example
294>> John originally wrote this
295>> and this as well
296> Jane said that John didn't know
297> what he was talking about
298And that's what I think too.
299@end example
300
301@ifinfo
302@menu
303* Citation Elements::
304* Recognizing Citations::
305@end menu
306@end ifinfo
307
308Note that multiple inclusions of the original messages result in a
309nesting of the @samp{@code{>}} characters. This can sometimes be quite
310confusing when many levels of citations are included since it may be
311difficult or impossible to figure out who actually participated in the
312thread, and multiple nesting of @samp{@code{>}} characters can sometimes
313make the message very difficult for the eye to scan.
314
315@cindex non-nested citations
316In @dfn{non-nested citations}, each cited line begins with an
317informative string attributing that line to the original author. Only
318the first level of attribution will be shown; subsequent citations don't
319nest the citation strings. The above dialog might look like this when
320non-nested citations are used:
321
322@example
323John> John originally wrote this
324John> and this as well
325Jane> Jane said that John didn't know
326Jane> what he was talking about
327And that's what I think too.
328@end example
329
330Notice here that my inclusion of Jane's inclusion of John's original
331message did not result in a line cited with @samp{Jane>John>}.
332
333@vindex sc-nested-citation-p
334@vindex nested-citation-p (sc-)
335Supercite supports both styles of citation, and the variable
336@code{sc-nested-citation-p} controls which style it will use when citing
337previously uncited text. When this variable is @code{nil} (the default),
338non-nested citations are used. When non-@code{nil}, nested citations
339are used.
340
341
342@node Citation Elements, Recognizing Citations, Citations, Citations
343@comment node-name, next, previous, up
344@cindex citation string
345@comment
346@section Citation Elements
347@ifinfo
348
349@end ifinfo
350@dfn{Citation strings} are composed of one or more elements. Non-nested
351citations are composed of four elements, three of which are directly
352user definable. The elements are concatenated together, in this order:
353
354@cindex citation leader
355@vindex citation-leader (sc-)
356@vindex sc-citation-leader
357@enumerate
358@item
359The @dfn{citation leader}. The citation leader is contained in the
360variable @code{sc-citation-leader}, and has the default value of a
361string containing four spaces.
362
363@cindex attribution string
364@item
365The @dfn{attribution string}. This element is supplied automatically by
366Supercite, based on your preferences and the original message's mail
367headers, though you may be asked to confirm Supercite's choice.
368@xref{Selecting an Attribution}, for more details.@refill
369
370@cindex citation delimiter
371@vindex sc-citation-delimiter
372@vindex citation-delimiter (sc-)
373@item
374The @dfn{citation delimiter}. This string, contained in the variable
375@code{sc-citation-delimiter} visually separates the citation from the
376text of the line. This variable has a default value of @code{">"} and
377for best results, the string should consist of only a single character.
378
379@cindex citation separator
380@vindex citation-separator (sc-)
381@vindex sc-citation-separator
382@item
383The @dfn{citation separator}. The citation separator is contained in
384the variable @code{sc-citation-separator}, and has the default value of
385a string containing a single space.
386@end enumerate
387
388For example, suppose you were using the default values for the above
389variables, and Supercite provided the attribution string @samp{Jane}.
390In this case, the composed, non-nested citation string used might be
391something like
392@code{@asis{" Jane> "}}.
393This citation string will be inserted in front of
394every line in the original message that is not already cited.@refill
395
396Nested citations, being simpler than non-nested citations, are composed
397of the same elements, sans the attribution string. Supercite is smart
398enough to not put additional spaces between citation delimiters for
399multi-level nested citations.
400
401@node Recognizing Citations, Getting Connected, Citation Elements, Citations
402@comment node-name, next, previous, up
403@section Recognizing Citations
404@ifinfo
405
406@end ifinfo
407Supercite also recognizes citations in the original article, and can
408transform these already cited lines in a number of ways. This is how
409Supercite suppresses the multiple citing of non-nested citations.
410Recognition of cited lines is controlled by variables analogous to those
411that make up the citation string as mentioned previously.
412
413@vindex sc-citation-leader-regexp
414@vindex citation-leader-regexp (sc-)
415@vindex sc-citation-delimiter-regexp
416@vindex citation-delimiter-regexp (sc-)
417@vindex sc-citation-separator-regexp
418@vindex citation-separator-regexp (sc-)
419@vindex sc-citation-root-regexp
420@vindex citation-root-regexp (sc-)
421@vindex sc-citation-nonnested-root-regexp
422@vindex citation-nonnested-root-regexp (sc-)
423
424The variable @code{sc-citation-leader-regexp} describes how citation
425leaders can look, by default it matches any number of spaces or tabs.
426Note that since the lisp function @code{looking-at} is used to do the
427matching, if you change this variable it need not start with a leading
428@code{"^"}.
429
430Similarly, the variables @code{sc-citation-delimiter-regexp} and
431@code{sc-citation-separator-regexp} respectively describe how citation
432delimiters and separators can look. They follow the same rule as
433@code{sc-citation-leader-regexp} above.
434
435When Supercite composes a citation string, it provides the attribution
436automatically. The analogous variable which handles recognition of the
437attribution part of citation strings is @code{sc-citation-root-regexp}.
438This variable describes the attribution root for both nested and
439non-nested citations. By default it can match zero-to-many alphanumeric
440characters (also ``.'', ``-'', and ``_''). But in some situations,
441Supercite has to determine whether it is looking at a nested or
442non-nested citation. Thus the variable
443@code{sc-citation-nonnested-root-regexp} is used to describe only
444non-nested citation roots. It is important to remember that if you
445change @code{sc-citation-root-regexp} you should always also change
446@code{sc-citation-nonnested-root-regexp}.@refill
447
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448@node Information Keys and the Info Alist, Reference Headers, Miscellaneous Commands, Top
449@comment node-name, next, previous, up
450@cindex information keys
451@cindex Info Alist
452@cindex information extracted from mail fields
453@findex sc-mail-field
454@findex mail-field (sc-)
455@comment
456@chapter Information Keys and the Info Alist
457@ifinfo
458
459@end ifinfo
460@dfn{Mail header information keys} are nuggets of information that
461Supercite extracts from the various mail headers of the original
462message, placed in the reply buffer by the MUA. Information is kept in
463the @dfn{Info Alist} as key-value pairs, and can be retrieved for use in
464various places within Supercite, such as in header rewrite functions and
465attribution selection. Other bits of data, composed and created by
466Supercite, are also kept as key-value pairs in this alist. In the case
467of mail fields, the key is the name of the field, omitting the trailing
468colon. Info keys are always case insensitive (as are mail headers), and
469the value for a corresponding key can be retrieved from the alist with
470the @code{sc-mail-field} function. Thus, if the following fields were
471present in the original article:@refill
472
473@example
474Date:@: 08 April 1991, 17:32:09 EST
475Subject:@: Better get out your asbestos suit
476@end example
477
478@vindex sc-mumble
479@vindex mumble (sc-)
480@noindent
481then, the following lisp constructs return:
482
483@example
484(sc-mail-field "date")
485==> "08 April 1991, 17:32:09 EST"
486
487(sc-mail-field "subject")
488==> "Better get out your asbestos suit"
489@end example
490
491Since the argument to @code{sc-mail-field} can be any string, it is
492possible that the mail field will not be present on the info alist
493(possibly because the mail header was not present in the original
494message). In this case, @code{sc-mail-field} will return the value of
495the variable @code{sc-mumble}.
496
497Supercite always places all mail fields found in the yanked original
498article into the info alist. If possible, Supercite will also places
499the following keys into the info alist:
500
501@table @code
502@cindex sc-attribution info field
503@cindex attribution info field (sc-)
504@item "sc-attribution"
505the selected attribution string.
506
507@cindex sc-citation info field
508@cindex citation info field (sc-)
509@item "sc-citation"
510the non-nested citation string.
511
512@cindex sc-from-address info field
513@cindex from-address info field (sc-)
514@item "sc-from-address"
515email address extracted from the @samp{From:@:} field.
516
517@cindex sc-reply-address info field
518@cindex reply-address info field (sc-)
519@item "sc-reply-address"
520email address extracted from the @samp{Reply-To:@:} field.
521
522@cindex sc-sender-address info field
523@cindex sender-address info field (sc-)
524@item "sc-sender-address"
525email address extracted from the @samp{Sender:@:} field.
526
527@cindex sc-emailname info field
528@cindex emailname info field (sc-)
529@item "sc-emailname"
530email terminus extracted from the @samp{From:@:} field.
531
532@cindex sc-initials info field
533@cindex initials info field (sc-)
534@item "sc-initials"
535the author's initials.
536
537@cindex sc-author info field
538@cindex author info field (sc-)
539@item "sc-author"
540the author's full name.
541
542@cindex sc-firstname info field
543@cindex firstname info field (sc-)
544@item "sc-firstname"
545the author's first name.
546
547@cindex sc-lastname info field
548@cindex lastname info field (sc-)
549@item "sc-lastname"
550the author's last name.
551
552@cindex sc-middlename-1 info field
553@cindex middlename-1 info field (sc-)
554@item "sc-middlename-1"
555the author's first middle name.
556@end table
557
558If the author's name has more than one middle name, they will appear as
559info keys with the appropriate index (e.g., @code{"sc-middlename-2"},
560@dots{}). @xref{Selecting an Attribution}.@refill
561
562@node Reference Headers, The Built-in Header Rewrite Functions, Information Keys and the Info Alist, Top
563@comment node-name, next, previous, up
564@cindex reference headers
565@chapter Reference Headers
566@ifinfo
567
568@end ifinfo
569Supercite will insert an informative @dfn{reference header} at the
570beginning of the cited body of text, which display more detail about the
571original article and provides the mapping between the attribution and
572the original author in non-nested citations. Whereas the citation
573string usually only contains a portion of the original author's name,
574the reference header can contain such information as the author's full
575name, email address, the original article's subject, etc. In fact any
576information contained in the info alist can be inserted into a reference
577header.
578
579@ifinfo
580@menu
581* The Built-in Header Rewrite Functions::
582* Electric References::
583@end menu
584@end ifinfo
585
586@cindex header rewrite functions
587@vindex sc-rewrite-header-list
588@vindex rewrite-header-list (sc-)
589There are a number of built-in @dfn{header rewrite functions} supplied
590by Supercite, but you can write your own custom header rewrite functions
591(perhaps using the built-in ones as examples). The variable
592@code{sc-rewrite-header-list} contains the list of such header rewrite
593functions. This list is consulted both when inserting the initial
594reference header, and when displaying @dfn{electric references}.
595@xref{Electric References}.
596
597@vindex sc-preferred-header-style
598@vindex preferred-header-style (sc-)
599When Supercite is initially run on a reply buffer (via
600@code{sc-cite-original}), it will automatically call one of these
601functions. The one it uses is defined in the variable
602@code{sc-preferred-header-style}. The value of this variable is an
603integer which is an index into the @code{sc-rewrite-header-list},
604beginning at zero.
605
606@node The Built-in Header Rewrite Functions, Electric References, Reference Headers, Reference Headers
607@comment node-name, next, previous, up
608@cindex header rewrite functions, built-in
609@comment
610@section The Built-in Header Rewrite Functions
611@ifinfo
612
613@end ifinfo
614Below are examples of the various built-in header rewrite functions.
615Please note the following:@: first, the text which appears in the
616examples below as @var{infokey} indicates that the corresponding value
617of the info key from the info alist will be inserted there.
618(@pxref{Information Keys and the Info Alist}). For example, in @code{sc-header-on-said}
619below, @var{date} and @var{from} correspond to the values of the
620@samp{Date:@:} and @samp{From:@:} mail headers respectively.@refill
621
622@vindex sc-reference-tag-string
623@vindex reference-tag-string (sc-)
624Also, the string @code{">>>>>"} below is really the value of the
625variable @code{sc-reference-tag-string}. This variable is used in all
626built-in header rewrite functions, and you can customize its value to
627change the tag string globally.
628
629Finally, the references headers actually written may omit certain parts
630of the header if the info key associated with @var{infokey} is not
631present in the info alist. In fact, for all built-in headers, if the
632@samp{From:@:} field is not present in the mail headers, the entire
633reference header will be omitted (but this usually signals a serious
634problem either in your MUA or in Supercite's installation).
635
636@table @code
637@findex sc-no-header
638@findex no-header (sc-)
639@item sc-no-header
640This function produces no header. It should be used instead of
641@code{nil} to produce a blank header. This header can possibly contain
642a blank line after the @code{mail-header-separator} line.
643
644@item sc-no-blank-line-or-header
645@findex sc-no-blank-line-or-header
646@findex no-blank-line-or-header (sc-)
647This function is similar to @code{sc-no-header} except that any blank
648line after the @code{mail-header-separator} line will be removed.
649
650@item sc-header-on-said
651@findex sc-header-on-said
652@findex header-on-said (sc-)
653@code{>>>>> On @var{date}, @var{from} said:}
654
655@item sc-header-inarticle-writes
656@findex sc-header-inarticle-writes
657@findex header-inarticle-writes (sc-)
658@code{>>>>> In article @var{message-id}, @var{from} writes:}
659
660@item sc-header-regarding-adds
661@findex sc-header-regarding-adds
662@findex header-regarding-adds (sc-)
663@code{>>>>> Regarding @var{subject}; @var{from} adds:}
664
665@item sc-header-attributed-writes
666@findex sc-header-attributed-writes
667@findex header-attributed-writes (sc-)
668@code{>>>>> "@var{sc-attribution}" == @var{sc-author} <@var{sc-reply-address}> writes:}
669
670@item sc-header-author-writes
671@findex sc-header-author-writes
672@findex header-author-writes (sc-)
673@code{>>>>> @var{sc-author} writes:}
674
675@item sc-header-verbose
676@findex sc-header-verbose
677@findex header-verbose (sc-)
678@code{>>>>> On @var{date},}@*
679@code{>>>>> @var{sc-author}}@*
680@code{>>>>> from the organization of @var{organization}}@*
681@code{>>>>> who can be reached at:@: @var{sc-reply-address}}@*
682@code{>>>>> (whose comments are cited below with:@: "@var{sc-cite}")}@*
683@code{>>>>> had this to say in article @var{message-id}}@*
684@code{>>>>> in newsgroups @var{newsgroups}}@*
685@code{>>>>> concerning the subject of @var{subject}}@*
686@code{>>>>> see @var{references} for more details}
687@end table
688
689@node Electric References, Hints to MUA Authors, The Built-in Header Rewrite Functions, Reference Headers
690@comment node-name, next, previous, up
691@cindex electric references
692@section Electric References
693@ifinfo
694
695@end ifinfo
696By default, when Supercite cites the original message for the first
697time, it just goes ahead and inserts the reference header indexed by
698@code{sc-preferred-header-style}. However, you may want to select
699different reference headers based on the type of reply or forwarding you
700are doing. You may also want to preview the reference header before
701deciding whether to insert it into the reply buffer or not. Supercite
702provides an optional @dfn{electric reference} mode which you can drop
703into to give you this functionality.
704
705@vindex sc-electric-references-p
706@vindex electric-references-p (sc-)
707If the variable @code{sc-electric-references-p} is non-@code{nil},
708Supercite will bring up an electric reference mode buffer and place you
709into a recursive edit. The electric reference buffer is read-only, so
710you cannot directly modify the reference text until you exit electric
711references and insert the text into the reply buffer. But you can cycle
712through all the reference header rewrite functions in your
713@code{sc-rewrite-header-list}.
714
715You can also set a new preferred header style, jump to any header, or
716jump to the preferred header. The header will be shown in the electric
717reference buffer and the header index and function name will appear in
718the echo area.
719
720The following commands are available while in electric reference mode
721(shown here with their default key bindings):
722
723@table @asis
724@item @code{sc-eref-next} (@kbd{n})
725@findex sc-eref-next
726@findex eref-next (sc-)
727@kindex n
728@vindex sc-electric-circular-p
729@vindex electric-circular-p (sc-)
730Displays the next reference header in the electric reference buffer. If
731the variable @code{sc-electric-circular-p} is non-@code{nil}, invoking
732@code{sc-eref-next} while viewing the last reference header in the list
733will wrap around to the first header.@refill
734
735@item @code{sc-eref-prev} (@kbd{p})
736@findex sc-eref-prev
737@findex eref-prev (sc-)
738@kindex p
739Displays the previous reference header in the electric reference buffer.
740If the variable @code{sc-electric-circular-p} is non-@code{nil},
741invoking @code{sc-eref-prev} will wrap around to the last header.@refill
742
743@item @code{sc-eref-goto} (@kbd{g})
744@findex sc-eref-goto
745@findex eref-goto (sc-)
746@kindex g
747Goes to a specified reference header. The index (into the
748@code{sc-rewrite-header-list}) can be specified as a numeric argument to
749the command. Otherwise, Supercite will query you for the index in the
750minibuffer.@refill
751
752@item @code{sc-eref-jump} (@kbd{j})
753@findex sc-eref-jump
754@findex eref-jump (sc-)
755@kindex j
756Display the preferred reference header, i.e., the one indexed by the current
757value of @code{sc-preferred-header-style}.
758
759@item @code{sc-eref-setn} (@kbd{s})
760@findex sc-eref-setn
761@findex eref-setn (sc-)
762@kindex s
763Set the preferred reference header (i.e.,
764@code{sc-preferred-header-style}) to the currently displayed header.@refill
765
766@item @code{sc-eref-exit} (@kbd{C-j}, @key{RET}, and @key{ESC C-c})
767@kindex RET
768@kindex C-j
769@kindex q
770@findex sc-eref-exit
771@findex eref-exit (sc-)
772Exit from electric reference mode and insert the current header into the
773reply buffer.@refill
774
775@item @code{sc-eref-abort} (@kbd{q}, @kbd{x})
776@findex sc-eref-abort
777@findex eref-abort (sc-)
778@kindex x
779Exit from electric reference mode without inserting the current header.
780@end table
781
782@vindex sc-electric-mode-hook
783@vindex electric-mode-hook (sc-)
784@noindent
785Supercite will execute the hook @code{sc-electric-mode-hook} before
786entering electric reference mode.
787
788@node Getting Connected, Emacs 19 MUAs, Recognizing Citations, Top
789@comment node-name, next, previous, up
790@cindex citation interface specification
791@chapter Getting Connected
792@ifinfo
793
794@end ifinfo
795Hitting @kbd{C-c C-y} in your MUA's reply buffer yanks and cites the
796original message into the reply buffer. In reality, the citation of the
797original message is performed via a call through a configurable hook
798variable. The name of this variable has been agreed to in advance as
799part of the @dfn{citation interface specification}. By default this
800hook variable has a @code{nil} value, which the MUA recognizes to mean,
44df92db 801``use your default citation function.'' When you add Supercite's
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802citation function to the hook, thereby giving the variable a
803non-@code{nil} value, it tells the MUA to run the hook via
804@code{run-hooks} instead of using the default citation.@refill
805
806@ifinfo
807@menu
808* Emacs 19 MUAs::
809* Emacs 18 MUAs::
810* MH-E with any Emacsen::
811* VM with any Emacsen::
812* GNEWS with any Emacsen::
813* Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs::
814@end menu
815@end ifinfo
816
817Early in Supercite's development, the Supercite author, a few MUA
818authors, and some early Supercite users got together and agreed upon a
819standard interface between MUAs and citation packages (of which
820Supercite is currently the only known add-on @t{:-)}. With the recent
821release of the Free Software Foundation's GNU Emacs 19, the interface
822has undergone some modification and it is possible that not all MUAs
823support the new interface yet. Some support only the old interface and
824some do not support the interface at all. Still, it is possible for all
825known MUAs to use Supercite, and the following sections will outline the
826procedures you need to follow.
827
828To learn exactly how to connect Supercite to the software systems you
829are using, read the appropriate following sections. For details on the
830interface specifications, or if you are writing or maintaining an MUA,
831@pxref{Hints to MUA Authors}.
832
833@cindex autoload
834@cindex .emacs file
835@findex sc-cite-original
836@findex cite-original (sc-)
837@findex sc-submit-bug-report
838@findex submit-bug-report (sc-)
839The first thing that everyone should do, regardless of the MUA you are
840using is to set up Emacs so it will load Supercite at the appropriate
841time. You can either dump Supercite into your Emacs binary (ask your
842local Emacs guru how to do this if you don't know), or you can set up an
843@dfn{autoload} for Supercite. To do the latter, put the following in
844your @file{.emacs} file:
845
846@example
847(autoload 'sc-cite-original "supercite" "Supercite 3.1" t)
848(autoload 'sc-submit-bug-report "supercite" "Supercite 3.1" t)
849@end example
850
851@cindex point
852@cindex mark
853The function @code{sc-cite-original} is the top-level Supercite function
854designed to be run from the citation hook. It expects
855@samp{point} and @samp{mark} to be set around the region to cite, and it
856expects the original article's mail headers to be present within this
857region. Note that Supercite @emph{never} touches any text outside this
858region. Note further that for Emacs 19, the region need not be active
859for @code{sc-cite-original} to do its job.
860@xref{Hints to MUA Authors}.@refill
861
862The other step in the getting connected process is to make sure your
863MUA calls @code{sc-cite-original} at the right time. As mentioned
864above, some MUAs handle this differently. Read the sections that follow
865pertaining to the MUAs you are using.
866
867@vindex sc-load-hook
868@vindex load-hook (sc-)
869@vindex sc-pre-hook
870@vindex pre-hook (sc-)
871One final note. After Supercite is loaded into your Emacs session, it
872runs the hook @code{sc-load-hook}. You can put any customizations into
873this hook since it is only run once. This will not work, however, if
874your Emacs maintainer has put Supercite into your dumped Emacs' image.
875In that case, you can use the @code{sc-pre-hook} variable, but this will
876get executed every time @code{sc-cite-original} is called. @xref{Reply
877Buffer Initialization}.@refill
878
879@node Emacs 19 MUAs, Emacs 18 MUAs, Getting Connected, Getting Connected
880@comment node-name, next, previous, up
881@vindex mail-citation-hook
882@cindex .emacs file
883@section GNUS, RMAIL, or RNEWS with any Emacs 19
884@ifinfo
885
886@end ifinfo
887These MUAs, distributed with Emacs and with Lucid Emacs, use Emacs's
888built-in yanking facility, which provides the citing hook variable
889@code{mail-citation-hook}. By default, this hook's value is @code{nil},
890but by adding the following to your @file{.emacs} file, you can tell
891these MUAs to use Supercite to perform the citing of the original
892message:
893
894@example
895(add-hook 'mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original)
896@end example
897
898GNUS users may also want to add the following bit of lisp as well. This
899prevents GNUS from inserting its default attribution header. Otherwise,
900both GNUS and Supercite will insert an attribution header:
901
902@example
903(setq news-reply-header-hook nil)
904@end example
905
906@node Emacs 18 MUAs, MH-E with any Emacsen, Emacs 19 MUAs, Getting Connected
907@comment node-name, next, previous, up
908@vindex mail-citation-hook
909@cindex .emacs file
910@cindex overloading
911@cindex sendmail.el file
912@section GNUS, RMAIL, PCMAIL, RNEWS with Emacs 18 or Epoch 4
913@ifinfo
914
915@end ifinfo
916These MUAs use Emacs' built-in yanking and citing routines, contained in
917the @file{sendmail.el} file. @file{sendmail.el} for Emacs 18, and its
918derivative Epoch 4, do not know anything about the citation interface
919required by Supercite. To connect Supercite to any of these MUAs under
920Emacs 18 or Epoch 4, you should first
921@pxref{Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs}. Then follow the directions
922for using these MUAs under Emacs 19.
923@xref{Emacs 19 MUAs}.@refill
924
925@cindex add-hook substitute
926@cindex setq as a substitute for add-hook
927@findex setq
928@findex add-hook
929@cindex sc-unsupp.el file
930Note that those instructions will tell you to use the function
931@code{add-hook}. This function is new with Emacs 19 and you will not
932have it by default if you are running Emacs 18 or Epoch 4. You can
933either substitute the appropriate call to @code{setq}, or you can use
934the @code{add-hook} function that is provided in the @file{sc-unsupp.el}
935file of unsupported Supercite hacks and ideas. Or you can upgrade to
936some Emacs 19 variant! @t{:-)}@refill
937
938To use @code{setq} instead of @code{add-hook}, you would, for example,
939change this:
940
941@example
942(add-hook 'mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original)
943@end example
944
945to:
946
947@example
948(setq mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original)
949@end example
950
951Note the lack of of a single quote on the first argument to @code{setq}.
952
953@node MH-E with any Emacsen, VM with any Emacsen, Emacs 18 MUAs, Getting Connected
954@comment node-name, next, previous, up
955@cindex .emacs file
956@vindex mh-yank-hooks
957@findex add-hook
958@cindex mail-citation-hook
959@section MH-E with any Emacsen
960@ifinfo
961
962@end ifinfo
963MH-E 4.x conforms to the @code{mail-citation-hook} interface supported
964by other MUAs. At the time of this writing, MH-E 4.0 has not been
965released, but if you have it, put this in your @file{.emacs} file to
966connect Supercite and MH-E 4.x:
967
968@example
969(add-hook 'mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original)
970@end example
971
972Note that if you are using Emacs 18 or Epoch 4, you will not have the
973@code{add-hook} function. @xref{Emacs 18 MUAs}, for details on how to
974proceed without @code{add-hook}.
975
976MH-E version 3.x uses a slightly different interface than other MUAs.
977MH-E provides a hook variable @code{mh-yank-hooks}, but it doesn't act
978like a hook, and doing an @code{add-hook} will not work.
979
980To connect Supercite to MH-E 3.x, you should instead add the following
981to your @code{.emacs} file:
982
983@example
984(add-hook 'mh-yank-hooks 'sc-cite-original)
985@end example
986
987@vindex mh-yank-from-start-of-msg
988You also need to make sure that MH-E includes all the original mail
989headers in the yanked message. The variable that controls this is
990@code{mh-yank-from-start-of-msg}. By default, this variable has the
991value @code{t}, which tells MH-E to include all the mail headers when
992yanking the original message. Before you switched to using Supercite,
993you may have set this variable to other values so as not to include the
994mail headers in the yanked message. Since Supercite requires these
995headers (and cleans them out for you), you need to make sure the value
996is @code{t}. This lisp, in your @file{.emacs} file will do the trick:
997
998@example
999(setq mh-yank-from-start-of-msg t)
1000@end example
1001
1002Note that versions of MH-E before 3.7 did not provide the
1003@code{mh-yank-hooks} variable. Your only option is to upgrade to MH-E
1004version 3.7 or later.
1005
1006@node VM with any Emacsen, GNEWS with any Emacsen, MH-E with any Emacsen, Getting Connected
1007@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1008@cindex .emacs file
1009@vindex mail-citation-hook
1010@vindex mail-yank-hooks
1011@section VM with any Emacsen
1012@ifinfo
1013
1014@end ifinfo
1015Since release 4.40, VM has supported the citation interface required by
1016Supercite. But since the interface has changed recently the details of
1017getting connected differ with the version of VM you are using.
1018
1019If you are running any release of VM after 4.40, you can add the
1020following to your @file{.emacs} to connect Supercite with VM:
1021
1022@example
1023(add-hook 'mail-yank-hooks 'sc-cite-original)
1024@end example
1025
1026Note that if you are using Emacs 18 or Epoch 4, you will not have the
1027@code{add-hook} function. @xref{Emacs 18 MUAs}, for details on how to
1028proceed without @code{add-hook}.
1029
1030Since version 5.34, VM has supported the newer @code{mail-citation-hook}
1031interface, but @code{mail-yank-hooks} is still being supported for
1032backward compatibility. If you are running a newer version of VM and
1033you want to maintain consistency with other MUAs, use this bit of code
1034instead:
1035
1036@example
1037(add-hook 'mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original)
1038@end example
1039
1040@node GNEWS with any Emacsen, Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs, VM with any Emacsen, Getting Connected
1041@comment node-name, next, previous, up@cindex .emacs file
1042@vindex news-reply-mode-hook
1043@findex sc-perform-overloads
1044@findex perform-overloads (sc-)
1045@vindex gnews-ready-hook
1046@section GNEWS with any Emacsen
1047@ifinfo
1048
1049@end ifinfo
1050As far as I know, no version of GNEWS supports the citation interface
1051required by Supercite. To connect Supercite with GNEWS, please first
1052@pxref{Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs}.
1053
1054After you have followed the directions in that section. You should add
1055the following lisp code to your @file{.emacs} file:
1056
1057@example
1058(add-hook 'mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original)
1059@end example
1060
1061Note that if you are using Emacs 18 or Epoch 4, you will not have the
1062@code{add-hook} function. @xref{Emacs 18 MUAs}, for details on how to
1063proceed without @code{add-hook}.
1064
1065@node Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs, Replying and Yanking, GNEWS with any Emacsen, Getting Connected
1066@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1067@cindex overloading
1068@cindex sc-oloads.el
1069@vindex mail-citation-hook
1070@findex sc-perform-overloads
1071@cindex .emacs file
1072@section Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs
1073@ifinfo
1074
1075@end ifinfo
1076As mentioned elsewhere, some MUAs do not provide the necessary hooks to
1077connect with Supercite. Supercite version 3.1 provides an unsupported
1078mechanism, called @dfn{overloading} which redefines certain key
1079functions in the MUA, so that it will call the @code{mail-citation-hook}
1080variable instead of the MUA's default hard-coded citing routines. Since
1081most newer versions of the known MUAs support the
1082@code{mail-citation-hook} variable, it is recommended that you upgrade
1083if at all possible. But if you can't upgrade, at least you're not out
1084of luck! Once you set up overloading properly, you should follow the
1085directions for connecting Supercite to the Emacs 19 MUAs.
1086@xref{Emacs 19 MUAs}.@refill
1087
1088@cindex Hyperbole
1089@vindex hyperb:version
1090Users of Bob Weiner's Hyperbole package take note. Hyperbole provides
1091the necessary overloads (and a whole lot more!) and you can potentially
1092clobber it if you were to load Supercite's overloading after
1093Hyperbole's. For this reason, Supercite will @emph{not} perform any
1094overloading if it finds the variable @code{hyperb:version} is
1095@code{boundp} (i.e. it exists because Hyperbole has been loaded into
1096your Emacs session). If this is the case, Supercite will display a
1097warning message in the minibuffer. You should consult the Hyperbole
1098manual for further details.
1099
1100Overloading involves the re-definition of the citing function with the
1101new, @code{mail-citation-hook} savvy version. The function in
1102@file{sc-oloads.el} that does this is @code{sc-perform-overloads}. This
1103function is smart enough to only overload the MUA functions when it is
1104absolutely necessary, based on the version numbers it can figure out.
1105Also, @code{sc-perform-overloads} will only install the new functions
1106once. It is also smart enough to do nothing if the MUA is not yet
1107loaded.@refill
1108
1109The tricky part is finding the right time and place to perform the
1110overloading. It must be done after the MUA has been loaded into your
1111Emacs session, but before the first time you try to yank in a message.
1112Fortunately, this has been figured out for you.
1113
1114If you must overload, you should put the following lisp code in your
1115@file{.emacs} file, to make sure the @file{sc-oloads.el} file gets
1116loaded at the right time:
1117
1118@example
1119(autoload 'sc-perform-overloads "sc-oloads" "Supercite 3.1" t)
1120@end example
1121
1122Then you must make sure that the function @code{sc-perform-overloads}
1123gets run at the right time. For GNUS, put this in your @file{.emacs}
1124file:
1125
1126@example
1127(setq news-reply-mode-hook 'sc-perform-overloads)
1128(setq mail-setup-hook 'sc-perform-overloads)
1129@end example
1130
1131If you are using RNEWS, put this in your @file{.emacs} file:
1132
1133@vindex news-reply-mode-hook
1134@example
1135(setq news-reply-mode-hook 'sc-perform-overloads)
1136@end example
1137
1138If you are using RMAIL or PCMAIL, put this in your @file{.emacs} file:
1139
1140@example
1141(setq mail-setup-hook 'sc-perform-overloads)
1142@end example
1143
1144If you are using GNEWS, put this in your @file{.emacs} file:
1145
1146@example
1147(setq news-reply-mode-hook 'sc-perform-overloads)
1148(setq gnews-ready-hook 'sc-perform-overloads)
1149@end example
1150
1151Now go back and follow the directions for getting the Emacs 19 MUAs
1152connected to Supercite. Be sure to @pxref{Emacs 18 MUAs} on substitutes
1153for Emacs 19's @code{add-hook} function.@refill
1154
1155@node Replying and Yanking, Reply Buffer Initialization, Overloading for Non-conforming MUAs, Top
1156@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1157@chapter Replying and Yanking
1158@ifinfo
1159
1160This chapter explains what happens when you reply and yank an original
1161message from an MUA.
1162
1163@menu
1164* Reply Buffer Initialization::
1165* Filling Cited Text::
1166@end menu
1167@end ifinfo
1168@node Reply Buffer Initialization, Filling Cited Text, Replying and Yanking, Replying and Yanking
1169@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1170@findex sc-cite-original
1171@findex cite-original (sc-)
1172@comment
1173@section Reply Buffer Initialization
1174@ifinfo
1175
1176@end ifinfo
1177Executing @code{sc-cite-original} performs the following steps as it
1178initializes the reply buffer:
1179
1180@enumerate
177c0ea7 1181@item
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1182@vindex sc-pre-hook
1183@vindex pre-hook (sc-)
1184@emph{Runs @code{sc-pre-hook}.}
1185This hook variable is run before @code{sc-cite-original} does any other
1186work. You could conceivably use this hook to set certain Supercite
1187variables based on the reply buffer's mode or name (i.e., to do
1188something different based on whether you are replying or following up to
1189an article).@refill
1190
1191@item
1192@emph{Inserts Supercite's keymap.}
1193@vindex sc-mode-map-prefix
1194@vindex mode-map-prefix (sc-)
1195@kindex C-c C-p
1196@cindex keymap prefix
1197Supercite provides a number of commands for performing post-yank
1198modifications to the reply buffer. These commands are installed on
1199Supercite's top-level keymap. Since Supercite has to interface with a
1200wide variety of MUAs, it does not install all of its commands directly
1201into the reply buffer's keymap. Instead, it puts its commands on a
1202keymap prefix, then installs this prefix onto the buffer's keymap. What
1203this means is that you typically have to type more characters to invoke
47d7776c 1204a Supercite command, but Supercite's key bindings can be made much more
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1205consistent across MUAs.
1206
1207You can control what key Supercite uses as its keymap prefix by changing
1208the variable @code{sc-mode-map-prefix}. By default, this variable is
1209set to @code{C-c C-p}; a finger twister perhaps, but unfortunately the
47d7776c 1210best default due to the scarcity of available key bindings in many MUAs.
6bf7aab6
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1211
1212@item
1213@emph{Turns on Supercite minor mode.}
1214@cindex modeline
1215The modeline of the reply buffer should indicate that Supercite is
1216active in that buffer by displaying the string @samp{SC}.
1217
1218@item
44df92db 1219@emph{Sets the ``Undo Boundary.''}
6bf7aab6
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1220@cindex undo boundary
1221Supercite sets an undo boundary before it begins to modify the original
1222yanked text. This allows you to easily undo Supercite's changes to
1223affect alternative citing styles.
1224
177c0ea7 1225@item
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1226@emph{Processes the mail headers.}
1227@vindex sc-confirm-always-p
1228@vindex confirm-always-p (sc-)
1229@vindex sc-mail-warn-if-non-rfc822-p
1230@vindex mail-warn-if-non-rfc822-p (sc-)
1231All previously retrieved info key-value pairs are deleted from the info
1232alist, then the mail headers in the body of the yanked message are
1233scanned. Info key-value pairs are created for each header found. Also,
1234such useful information as the author's name and email address are
1235extracted. If the variable @code{sc-mail-warn-if-non-rfc822-p} is
1236non-@code{nil}, then Supercite will warn you if it finds a mail header
1237that does not conform to RFC822. This is rare and indicates a problem
1238either with your MUA or the original author's MUA, or some MTA (mail
1239transport agent) along the way.
1240
1241@vindex sc-nuke-mail-headers
1242@vindex sc-nuke-mail-header-list
1243@vindex nuke-mail-headers (sc-)
1244@vindex nuke-mail-header-list (sc-)
1245Once the info keys have been extracted from the mail headers, the
1246headers are nuked from the reply buffer. You can control exactly which
1247headers are removed or kept, but by default, all headers are removed.
1248
1249There are two variables which control mail header nuking. The variable
1250@code{sc-nuke-mail-headers} controls the overall behavior of the header
1251nuking routines. By setting this variable to @code{'all}, you
1252automatically nuke all mail headers. Likewise, setting this variable to
1253@code{'none} inhibits nuking of any mail headers. In between these
1254extremes, you can tell Supercite to nuke only a specified list of mail
1255headers by setting this variable to @code{'specified}, or to keep only a
1256specified list of headers by setting it to @code{'keep}.
1257
1258If @code{sc-nuke-mail-headers} is set to @code{'specified} or
1259@code{'keep}, then the variable @code{sc-nuke-mail-header-list} is
1260consulted for the list of headers to nuke or keep. This variable
1261contains a list of regular expressions. If the mail header line matches
1262a regular expression in this list, the header will be nuked or kept.
1263The line is matched against the regexp using @code{looking-at} rooted at
1264the beginning of the line.
1265
1266@vindex sc-blank-lines-after-headers
1267@vindex blank-lines-after-headers (sc-)
1268If the variable @code{sc-blank-lines-after-headers} is non-@code{nil},
1269it contains the number of blank lines remaining in the buffer after mail
1270headers are nuked. By default, only one blank line is left in the buffer.
1271
1272@item
1273@emph{Selects the attribution and citation strings.}
1274Once the mail headers have been processed, Supercite selects a
1275attribution string and a citation string which it will use to cite the
1276original message. @xref{Selecting an Attribution}, for details.
1277
177c0ea7 1278@item
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1279@emph{Cites the message body.}
1280@vindex sc-cite-region-limit
1281@vindex cite-region-limit (sc-)b
1282After the selection of the attribution and citation strings, Supercite
1283cites the original message by inserting the citation string prefix in
1284front of every uncited line. You may not want Supercite to
1285automatically cite very long messages however. For example, some email
1286could contain a smaller header section followed by a huge uuencoded
1287message. It wouldn't make sense to cite the uuencoded message part when
1288responding to the original author's short preface. For this reason,
1289Supercite provides a variable which limits the automatic citation of
1290long messages to a certain maximum number of lines. The variable is
1291called @code{sc-cite-region-limit}. If this variable contains an
1292integer, messages with more lines that this will not be cited at all,
1293and a warning message will be displayed. Supercite has performed
1294everything necessary, though, for you to manually cite only the small
1295portion of the original message that you want to use.
1296
1297If @code{sc-cite-region-limit} contains a non-@code{nil} value, the
1298original message will always be cited, regardless of its size. If the
1299variable contains the value @code{nil}, the region will never be cited
1300automatically. Use this if you always want to be able to edit and cite
1301the message manually.
1302
1303@vindex sc-cite-blank-lines-p
1304@vindex cite-blank-lines-p (sc-)
1305The variable @code{sc-cite-blank-lines-p} controls whether blank lines
1306in the original message should be cited or not. If this variable is
1307non-@code{nil}, blank lines will be cited just like non-blank lines.
1308Otherwise, blank lines will be treated as paragraph separators.
1309
1310Citing of the original message is highly configurable. Supercite's
1311default setup does a pretty good job of citing many common forms of
1312previously cited messages. But there are as many citation styles out
1313there as people on the net, or just about! It would be impossible for
1314Supercite to anticipate every style in existence, and you probably
1315wouldn't encounter them all anyway. But you can configure Supercite to
1316recognize those styles you see often.
1317@xref{Configuring the Citation Engine}, for details.@refill
1318
177c0ea7 1319@item
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1320@emph{Runs @code{sc-post-hook}.}
1321@vindex sc-post-hook
1322@vindex post-hook (sc-)
1323This variable is very similar to @code{sc-pre-hook}, except that it runs
1324after @code{sc-cite-original} is finished. This hook is provided mostly
1325for completeness and backward compatibility. Perhaps it could be used to
1326reset certain variables set in @code{sc-pre-hook}.@refill
1327@end enumerate
1328
1329@node Filling Cited Text, Selecting an Attribution, Reply Buffer Initialization, Replying and Yanking
1330@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1331@cindex filling paragraphs
1332@vindex sc-auto-fill-region-p
1333@vindex auto-fill-region-p (sc-)
1334@cindex filladapt
1335@cindex gin-mode
1336@findex sc-setup-filladapt
1337@findex setup-filladapt (sc-)
1338@vindex sc-load-hook
1339@vindex load-hook (sc-)
1340@section Filling Cited Text
1341@ifinfo
1342
1343@end ifinfo
1344Supercite will automatically fill newly cited text from the original
1345message unless the variable @code{sc-auto-fill-region-p} has a
1346@code{nil} value. Supercite will also re-fill paragraphs when you
1347manually cite or re-cite text.
1348
1349However, during normal editing, Supercite itself cannot be used to fill
1350paragraphs. This is a change from version 2. There are other add-on
1351lisp packages which do filling much better than Supercite ever did. The
1352two best known are @dfn{filladapt} and @dfn{gin-mode}. Both work well
1353with Supercite and both are available at the normal Emacs Lisp archive
1354sites. @dfn{gin-mode} works pretty well out of the box, but if you use
1355@dfn{filladapt}, you may want to run the function
1356@code{sc-setup-filladapt} from your @code{sc-load-hook}. This simply
1357makes @dfn{filladapt} a little more Supercite savvy than its default
1358setup.
1359
1360@vindex sc-fixup-whitespace-p
1361@vindex fixup-whitespace-p (sc-)
1362Also, Supercite will collapse leading whitespace between the citation
1363string and the text on a line when the variable
1364@code{sc-fixup-whitespace-p} is non-@code{nil}. The default value for
1365this variable is @code{nil}.@refill
1366
1367@vindex fill-prefix
1368Its important to understand that Supercite's automatic filling (during
1369the initial citation of the reply) is very fragile. That is because
1370figuring out the @code{fill-prefix} for a particular paragraph is a
1371really hard thing to do automatically. This is especially the case when
1372the original message contains code or some other text where leading
1373whitespace is important to preserve. For this reason, many Supercite
1374users typically run with @code{sc-auto-fill-region-p} (and possibly also
1375@code{sc-fixup-whitespace-p}) set to @code{nil}. They then manually
1376fill each cited paragraph in the reply buffer.
1377
1378I usually run with both these variables containing their default values.
1379When Supercite's automatic filling breaks on a particular message, I
1380will use Emacs' undo feature to undo back before the citation was
1381applied to the original message. Then I'll toggle the variables and
1382manually cite those paragraphs that I don't want to fill or collapse
1383whitespace on. @xref{Variable Toggling Shortcuts}.@refill
1384
1385@kindex C-c C-p C-p
1386If you find that Supercite's automatic filling is just too fragile for
1387your tastes, you might consider one of these alternate approaches.
1388Also, to make life easier, a shortcut function to toggle the state of
1389both of these variables is provided on the key binding
1390@kbd{C-c C-p C-p} (with the default value of @code{sc-mode-map-prefix};
1391@pxref{Post-yank Formatting Commands}).@refill
1392
1393You will noticed that the minor mode string will
1394show the state of these variables as qualifier characters. When both
1395variables are @code{nil}, the Supercite minor mode string will display
1396@samp{SC}. When just @code{sc-auto-fill-region-p} is non-@code{nil}, the
1397string will display @samp{SC:f}, and when just
1398@code{sc-fixup-whitespace-p} is non-@code{nil}, the string will display
1399@samp{SC:w}. When both variables are non-@code{nil}, the string will
1400display @samp{SC:fw}. Note that the qualifiers chosen are mnemonics for
1401the default bindings of the toggling function for each respective
1402variable.
1403@xref{Variable Toggling Shortcuts}.@refill
1404
1405Why are these variables not set to @code{nil} by default? It is because
1406many users won't manually fill paragraphs that are Supercited, and there
1407have been widespread complaints on the net about mail and news messages
1408containing lines greater than about 72 characters. So the default is to
1409fill cited text.
1410
1411@node Selecting an Attribution, Attribution Preferences, Filling Cited Text, Top
1412@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1413@cindex attribution list
1414@vindex sc-preferred-attribution-list
1415@vindex preferred-attribution-list (sc-)
1416@comment
1417@chapter Selecting an Attribution
1418@ifinfo
1419
1420@end ifinfo
1421As you know, the attribution string is the part of the author's name
1422that will be used to composed a non-nested citation string. Supercite
1423scans the various mail headers present in the original article and uses
1424a number of heuristics to extract strings which it puts into the
1425@dfn{attribution association list} or @dfn{attribution alist}. This is
1426analogous, but different than, the info alist previously mentioned. Each
1427element in the attribution alist is a key-value pair containing such
1428information as the author's first name, middle names, and last name, the
1429author's initials, and the author's email terminus.
1430
1431@ifinfo
1432@menu
1433* Attribution Preferences::
1434* Anonymous Attributions::
1435* Author Names::
1436@end menu
1437@end ifinfo
1438
1439@node Attribution Preferences, Anonymous Attributions, Selecting an Attribution, Selecting an Attribution
1440@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1441@section Attribution Preferences
1442@ifinfo
1443
1444@end ifinfo
1445When you cite an original message, you can tell Supercite which part of
1446the author's name you would prefer it to use as the attribution. The
1447variable @code{sc-preferred-attribution-list} controls this; it contains
1448keys which are matched against the attribution alist in the given order.
1449The first value of a key that produces a non-@code{nil}, non-empty
1450string match is used as the attribution string, and if no keys match, a
1451secondary mechanism is used to generate the attribution.
1452@xref{Anonymous Attributions}.
1453
1454The following preferences are always available in the attribution alist
1455(barring error):
1456
1457@table @code
1458@item "emailname"
1459the author's email terminus.
1460
1461@item "initials"
1462the author's initials.
1463
1464@item "firstname"
1465the author's first name.
1466
1467@item "lastname"
1468the author's last name.
1469
1470@item "middlename-1"
1471the author's first middle name.
1472
1473@item "sc-lastchoice"
1474the last attribution string you have selected. This is useful when you
1475recite paragraphs in the reply.@refill
1476
1477@item "sc-consult"
1478@vindex sc-attrib-selection-list
1479@vindex attrib-selection-list (sc-)
1480consults the customizable list @code{sc-attrib-selection-list} which can
1481be used to select special attributions based on the value of any info
1482key. See below for details.
1483
1484@item "x-attribution"
1485the original author's suggestion for attribution string choice. See below
1486for details.@refill
1487@end table
1488
1489Middle name indexes can be any positive integer greater than zero,
1490though it is unlikely that many authors will have more than one middle
1491name, if that many.
1492
1493At this point, let me digress into a discussion of etiquette. It is my
1494belief that while the style of the citations is a reflection of the
1495personal tastes of the replier (i.e., you), the attribution selection is
1496ultimately the personal choice of the original author. In a sense it is
1497his or her ``net nickname'', and therefore the author should have some
1498say in the selection of attribution string. Imagine how you would feel
1499if someone gave you a nickname that you didn't like?
1500
1501For this reason, Supercite recognizes a special mail header,
1502@samp{X-Attribution:}, which if present, tells Supercite the attribution
1503string preferred by the original author. It is the value of this header
1504that is associated with the @code{"x-attribution"} key in the
1505attribution alist. Currently, you can override the preference of this
1506key by changing @code{sc-preferred-attribution-list}, but that isn't
1507polite, and in the future Supercite may hard-code this. For now, it is
1508suggested that if you change the order of the keys in this list, that
1509@code{"x-attribution"} always be first, or possible second behind only
1510@code{"sc-lastchoice"}. This latter is the default.
1511
1512@vindex sc-attrib-selection-list
1513@vindex attrib-selection-list (sc-)
1514The value @code{"sc-consult"} in @code{sc-preferred-attribution-list}
1515has a special meaning during attribution selection. When Supercite
1516encounters this preference, it begins processing a customizable list of
1517attributions, contained in the variable @code{sc-attrib-selection-list}.
1518Each element in this list contains lists of the following form:
1519
1520@example
1521@group
1522(@var{infokey} ((@var{regexp} @. @var{attribution})
1523 (@var{regexp} @. @var{attribution})
1524 (@dots{})))
1525@end group
1526@end example
1527
1528@noindent
1529@findex sc-mail-field
1530@findex mail-field (sc-)
1531where @var{infokey} is a key for @code{sc-mail-field} and @var{regexp}
1532is a regular expression to match against the @var{infokey}'s value. If
1533@var{regexp} matches the @var{infokey}'s value, the @var{attribution} is
1534used as the attribution string. Actually, @var{attribution} can be a
1535string or a list; if it is a list, it is @code{eval}uated and the return
1536value (which must be a string), is used as the attribution.
1537
1538This can be very useful for when you are replying to net acquaintances
1539who do not use the @samp{X-Attribution:@:} mail header. You may know
1540what nickname they would prefer to use, and you can set up this list to
1541match against a specific mail field, e.g., @samp{From:@:}, allowing you
1542to cite your friend's message with the appropriate attribution.
1543
1544@node Anonymous Attributions, Author Names, Attribution Preferences, Selecting an Attribution
1545@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1546@vindex sc-default-author-name
1547@vindex default-author-name (sc-)
1548@vindex sc-default-attribution
1549@vindex default-attribution (sc-)
1550@comment
1551@section Anonymous Attributions
1552@ifinfo
1553
1554@end ifinfo
1555When the author's name cannot be found in the @samp{From:@:} mail
1556header, a fallback author name and attribution string must be supplied.
1557The fallback author name is contained in the variable
1558@code{sc-default-author-name} and the fallback attribution string is
1559contained in the variable @code{sc-default-attribution}. Default values
1560for these variables are @code{"Anonymous"} and @code{"Anon"},
1561respectively. Note that in most circumstances, getting the default
1562author name or attribution is a sign that something is set up
1563incorrectly.
1564
1565@vindex sc-use-only-preference-p
1566@vindex use-only-preference-p (sc-)
1567Also, if the preferred attribution, which you specified in your
1568@code{sc-preferred-attribution-alist} variable cannot be found, a
1569secondary method can be employed to find a valid attribution string. The
1570variable @code{sc-use-only-preference-p} controls what happens in this
1571case. If the variable's value is non-@code{nil}, then
1572@code{sc-default-author-name} and @code{sc-default-attribution} are
1573used, otherwise, the following steps are taken to find a valid
1574attribution string, and the first step to return a non-@code{nil},
1575non-empty string becomes the attribution:@refill
1576
1577@enumerate
1578@item
1579Use the last selected attribution, if there is one.
1580
1581@item
1582Use the value of the @code{"x-attribution"} key.
1583
177c0ea7 1584@item
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1585Use the author's first name.
1586
1587@item
1588Use the author's last name.
1589
1590@item
1591Use the author's initials.
1592
177c0ea7 1593@item
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1594Find the first non-@code{nil}, non-empty attribution string in the
1595attribution alist.
1596
177c0ea7 1597@item
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1598@code{sc-default-attribution} is used.
1599@end enumerate
1600
1601@vindex sc-confirm-always-p
1602@vindex confirm-always-p (sc-)
1603Once the attribution string has been automatically selected, a number of
1604things can happen. If the variable @code{sc-confirm-always-p} is
1605non-@code{nil}, you are queried for confirmation of the chosen
1606attribution string. The possible values for completion are those strings
1607in the attribution alist, however you are not limited to these choices.
1608You can type any arbitrary string at the confirmation prompt. The string
1609you enter becomes the value associated with the @code{"sc-lastchoice"}
1610key in the attribution alist.
1611
1612@vindex sc-downcase-p
1613@vindex downcase-p (sc-)
1614Once an attribution string has been selected, Supercite will force the
1615string to lower case if the variable @code{sc-downcase-p} is
1616non-@code{nil}.
1617
1618@vindex sc-attribs-preselect-hook
1619@vindex attribs-preselect-hook (sc-)
1620@vindex sc-attribs-postselect-hook
1621@vindex attribs-postselect-hook (sc-)
1622
1623Two hook variables provide even greater control of the attribution
1624selection process. The hook @code{sc-attribs-preselect-hook} is run
1625before any attribution is selected. Likewise, the hook
1626@code{sc-attribs-postselect-hook} is run after the attribution is
1627selected (and the corresponding citation string is built), but before
1628these values are committed for use by Supercite. During the
1629post-selection hook, the local variables @code{attribution} and
1630@code{citation} are bound to the appropriate strings. By changing these
1631variables in your hook functions, you change the attribution and
1632citation strings used by Supercite. One possible use of this would be
1633to override any automatically derived attribution string when it is only
1634one character long; e.g. you prefer to use @code{"initials"} but the
1635author only has one name.@refill
1636
1637@node Author Names, Configuring the Citation Engine, Anonymous Attributions, Selecting an Attribution
1638@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1639@cindex author names
1640@section Author Names
1641@ifinfo
1642
1643@end ifinfo
1644Supercite employs a number of heuristics to decipher the author's name
1645based on value of the @samp{From:@:} mail field of the original message.
1646Supercite can recognize almost all of the common @samp{From:@:} field
1647formats in use. If you encounter a @samp{From:@:} field that Supercite
1648cannot parse, please report this bug.
1649@xref{The Supercite Mailing List}.@refill
1650
1651@vindex sc-titlecue-regexp
1652@vindex titlecue-regexp (sc-)
1653There are a number of Supercite variables that control how author names
1654are extracted from the @samp{From:@:} header. Some headers may contain a
1655descriptive title as in:
1656
1657@example
1658From:@: computer!speedy!doe (John Xavier-Doe -- Decent Hacker)
1659@end example
1660
1661Supercite knows which part of the @samp{From:@:} header is email address
1662and which part is author name, but in this case the string @code{"Decent
1663Hacker"} is not part of the author's name. You can tell Supercite to
1664ignore the title, while still recognizing hyphenated names through the
1665use of a regular expression in the variable @code{sc-titlecue-regexp}.
1666This variable has the default value of @code{"\\\\s +-+\\\\s +"}. Any
1667text after this regexp is encountered is ignored as noise.
1668
1669@vindex sc-name-filter-alist
1670@vindex name-filter-alist (sc-)
1671Some @samp{From:@:} headers may contain extra titles in the name fields
1672not separated by a title cue, but which are nonetheless not part of the
1673author's name proper. Examples include the titles ``Dr.'', ``Mr.'',
1674``Ms.'', ``Jr.'', ``Sr.'', and ``III'' (e.g., Thurston Howe, the Third).
1675Also, some companies prepend or append the name of the division,
1676organization, or project on the author's name. All of these titles are
1677noise which should be ignored. The variable @code{sc-name-filter-alist}
1678is used for this purpose. As implied by its name, this variable is an
1679association list, where each element is a cons cell of the form:
1680
1681@example
1682(@var{regexp} @. @var{position})
1683@end example
1684
1685@noindent
1686where @var{regexp} is a regular expression that is matched (using
1687@code{string-match}) against each element of the @samp{From:@:} field's
1688author name. @var{position} is a position indicator, starting at zero.
1689Thus to strip out all titles of ``Dr.'', ``Mr.'', etc. from the name,
1690@code{sc-name-filter-alist} would have an entry such as:
1691
1692@example
1693("^\\(Mr\\|Mrs\\|Ms\\|Dr\\)[.]?$" @. 0)
1694@end example
1695
1696@noindent
1697which only removes them if they appear as the first word in the name.
1698The position indicator is an integer, or one of the two special symbols
1699@code{last} or @code{any}. @code{last} always matches against the last
1700word in the name field, while @code{any} matches against every word in
1701the name field.
1702
1703@node Configuring the Citation Engine, Using Regi, Author Names, Top
1704@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1705@cindex Regi
1706@cindex frames (Regi)
1707@cindex entries (Regi)
1708@chapter Configuring the Citation Engine
1709@ifinfo
1710
1711@end ifinfo
1712At the heart of Supercite is a regular expression interpreting engine
1713called @dfn{Regi}. Regi operates by interpreting a data structure
1714called a Regi-frame (or just @dfn{frame}), which is a list of
1715Regi-entries (or just @dfn{entry}). Each entry contains a predicate,
1716typically a regular expression, which is matched against a line of text
1717in the current buffer. If the predicate matches true, an associated
1718expression is @code{eval}uated. In this way, an entire region of text
1719can be transformed in an @emph{awk}-like manner. Regi is used
1720throughout Supercite, from mail header information extraction, to header
1721nuking, to citing text.
1722
1723@ifinfo
1724@menu
1725* Using Regi::
1726* Frames You Can Customize::
1727@end menu
1728@end ifinfo
1729
1730While the details of Regi are discussed below (@pxref{Using Regi}), only
1731those who wish to customize certain aspects of Supercite need concern
1732themselves with it. It is important to understand though, that any
1733conceivable citation style that can be described by a regular expression
1734can be recognized by Supercite. This leads to some interesting
1735applications. For example, if you regularly receive email from a
1736co-worker that uses an uncommon citation style (say one that employs a
1737@samp{|} or @samp{@}} character at the front of the line), it is
1738possible for Supercite to recognize this and @emph{coerce} the citation
1739to your preferred style, for consistency. In theory, it is possible for
1740Supercite to recognize such things as uuencoded messages or C code and
1741cite or fill those differently than normal text. None of this is
1742currently part of Supercite, but contributions are welcome!
1743
1744@node Using Regi, Frames You Can Customize, Configuring the Citation Engine, Configuring the Citation Engine
1745@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1746@findex regi-interpret
1747@findex eval
1748@findex looking-at
1749@section Using Regi
1750@ifinfo
1751
1752@end ifinfo
1753Regi works by interpreting frames with the function
1754@code{regi-interpret}. A frame is a list of arbitrary size where each
1755element is a entry of the following form:
1756
1757@example
1758(@var{pred} @var{func} [@var{negate-p} [@var{case-fold-search}]])
1759@end example
1760
1761Regi starts with the first entry in a frame, evaluating the @var{pred}
1762of that entry against the beginning of the line that @samp{point} is on.
1763If the @var{pred} evaluates to true (or false if the optional
1764@var{negate-p} is non-@code{nil}), then the @var{func} for that entry is
1765@code{eval}uated. How processing continues is determined by the return
1766value for @var{func}, and is described below. If @var{pred} was false
1767the next entry in the frame is checked until all entries have been
1768matched against the current line. If no entry matches, @samp{point} is
1769moved forward one line and the frame is reset to the first entry.
1770
1771@var{pred} can be a string, a variable, a list or one of the following
1772symbols: @code{t}, @code{begin}, @code{end}, or @code{every}. If
1773@var{pred} is a string, or a variable or list that @code{eval}uates to a
1774string, it is interpreted as a regular expression. This regexp is
1775matched against the current line, from the beginning, using
1776@code{looking-at}. This match folds case if the optional
1777@var{case-fold-search} is non-@code{nil}. If @var{pred} is not a
1778string, or does not @code{eval}uate to a string, it is interpreted as a
1779binary value (@code{nil} or non-@code{nil}).@refill
1780
1781The four special symbol values for @var{pred} are recognized:
1782
1783@table @code
1784@item t
1785Always produces a true outcome.
1786@item begin
1787Always executed before the frame is interpreted. This can be used to
1788initialize some global variables for example.
1789@item end
1790Always executed after frame interpreting is completed. This can be used
1791to perform any necessary post-processing.
1792@item every
1793Executes whenever the frame is reset, usually after the entire frame has
1794been matched against the current line.
1795@end table
1796
1797Note that @var{negate-p} and @var{case-fold-search} are ignored if
1798@var{pred} is one of these special symbols. Only the first occurrence of
1799each symbol in a frame is used; any duplicates are ignored. Also
1800note that for performance reasons, the entries associated with these
1801symbols are removed from the frame during the main interpreting loop.
1802
1803Your @var{func} can return certain values which control continued Regi
1804processing. By default, if your @var{func} returns @code{nil} (as it
1805should be careful to do explicitly), Regi will reset the frame to the
1806first entry, and advance @samp{point} to the beginning of the next line.
1807If a list is returned from your function, it can contain any combination
1808of the following elements:@refill
1809
1810@table @asis
1811@item the symbol @code{continue}
1812This tells Regi to continue processing entries after a match, instead of
28665d46 1813resetting the frame and moving @samp{point}. In this way, lines of text
6bf7aab6
DL
1814can have multiple matches, but you have to be careful to avoid entering
1815infinite loops.
1816
1817@item the symbol @code{abort}
1818This tells Regi to terminate frame processing. However, any @code{end}
1819entry is still processed.
1820
1821@item the list @code{(frame . @var{newframe})}
1822This tells Regi to substitute @var{newframe} as the frame it is
1823interpreting. In other words, your @var{func} can modify the Regi frame
1824on the fly. @var{newframe} can be a variable containing a frame, or it
1825can be the frame in-lined.@refill
1826
1827@item the list @code{(step . @var{step})}
1828Tells Regi to move @var{step} number of lines forward as it continues
1829processing. By default, Regi moves forward one line. @var{step} can be
1830zero or negative of course, but watch out for infinite loops.@refill
1831@end table
1832
1833During execution of your @var{func}, the following variables will be
1834temporarily bound to some useful information:@refill
1835
1836@table @code
1837@item curline
1838The current line in the buffer that Regi is @code{looking-at}, as a string.
1839@item curframe
1840The current frame being interpreted.
1841@item curentry
1842The current frame entry being interpreted.
1843@end table
1844
1845@node Frames You Can Customize, Post-yank Formatting Commands, Using Regi, Configuring the Citation Engine
1846@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1847@vindex sc-nuke-mail-header
1848@section Frames You Can Customize
1849@ifinfo
1850
1851@end ifinfo
1852As mentioned earlier, Supercite uses various frames to perform
1853certain jobs such as mail header information extraction and mail header
1854nuking. However, these frames are not available for you to customize,
1855except through abstract interfaces such as @code{sc-nuke-mail-header},
1856et al.
1857
1858@vindex sc-default-cite-frame
1859However, the citation frames Supercite uses provide a lot of customizing
1860power and are thus available to you to change to suit your needs. The
1861workhorse of citation is the frame contained in the variable
1862@code{sc-default-cite-frame}. This frame recognizes many situations,
1863such as blank lines, which it interprets as paragraph separators. It
1864also recognizes previously cited nested and non-nested citations in the
1865original message. By default it will coerce non-nested citations into
1866your preferred citation style, and it will add a level of citation to
1867nested citations. It will also simply cite uncited lines in your
1868preferred style.
1869
1870@cindex unciting
1871@cindex reciting
1872@vindex sc-default-uncite-frame
1873@vindex sc-default-recite-frame
1874In a similar vein, there are default frames for @dfn{unciting} and
1875@dfn{reciting}, contained in the variables
1876@code{sc-default-uncite-frame} and @code{sc-default-recite-frame}
1877respectively.@refill
1878
1879As mentioned earlier (@pxref{Recognizing Citations}), citations are
1880recognized through the values of the regular expressions
1881@code{sc-citation-root-regexp}, et al. To recognize odd styles, you
1882could modify these variables, or you could modify the default citing
1883frame. Alternatively, you could set up association lists of frames for
1884recognizing specific alternative forms.
1885
1886@vindex sc-cite-frame-alist
1887@vindex sc-uncite-frame-alist
1888@vindex sc-recite-frame-alist
1889For each of the actions -- citing, unciting, and reciting -- an alist is
1890consulted to find the frame to use (@code{sc-cite-frame-alist},
1891@code{sc-uncite-frame-alist}, and @code{sc-recite-frame-alist}
1892respectively). These frames can contain alists of the form:
1893
1894@example
1895((@var{infokey} (@var{regexp} @. @var{frame}) (@var{regexp} @. @var{frame}) @dots{})
1896 (@var{infokey} (@var{regexp} @. @var{frame}) (@var{regexp} @. @var{frame}) @dots{})
1897 (@dots{}))
1898@end example
1899
1900@vindex sc-mail-field
1901@findex string-match
1902Where @var{infokey} is a key suitable for @code{sc-mail-field},
1903@var{regexp} is a regular expression which is @code{string-match}'d
1904against the value of the @code{sc-mail-field} key, and @var{frame} is
1905the frame to use if a match occurred. @var{frame} can be a variable
1906containing a frame or a frame in-lined.@refill
1907
1908When Supercite is about to cite, uncite, or recite a region, it consults
1909the appropriate alist and attempts to find a frame to use. If one
1910is not found from the alist, then the appropriate default frame is used.
1911
1912@node Post-yank Formatting Commands, Citing Commands, Frames You Can Customize, Top
1913@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1914@vindex sc-mode-map-prefix
1915@vindex mode-map-prefix (sc-)
1916@kindex C-c C-p
1917@chapter Post-yank Formatting Commands
1918@ifinfo
1919
1920@end ifinfo
1921Once the original message has been yanked into the reply buffer, and
1922@code{sc-cite-original} has had a chance to do its thing, a number of
1923useful Supercite commands will be available to you. Since there is wide
1924variety in the keymaps that MUAs set up in their reply buffers, it is
1925next to impossible for Supercite to properly sprinkle its commands into
1926the existing keymap. For this reason Supercite places its commands on a
1927separate keymap, putting this keymap onto a prefix key in the reply
1928buffer. You can customize the prefix key Supercite uses by changing the
1929variable @code{sc-mode-map-prefix}. By default, the
1930@code{sc-mode-map-prefix} is @kbd{C-c C-p}; granted, not a great choice,
1931but unfortunately the best general solution so far. In the rest of this
1932chapter, we'll assume you've installed Supercite's keymap on the default
1933prefix.@refill
1934
1935@ifinfo
1936@menu
1937* Citing Commands::
1938* Insertion Commands::
1939* Variable Toggling Shortcuts::
1940* Mail Field Commands::
1941* Miscellaneous Commands::
1942@end menu
1943@end ifinfo
1944
1945@node Citing Commands, Insertion Commands, Post-yank Formatting Commands, Post-yank Formatting Commands
1946@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1947@vindex sc-cite-region-limit
1948@section Commands to Manually Cite, Recite, and Uncite
1949@ifinfo
1950
1951@end ifinfo
1952Probably the three most common post-yank formatting operations that you
1953will perform will be the manual citing, reciting, and unciting of
1954regions of text in the reply buffer. Often you may want to recite a
1955paragraph to use a nickname, or manually cite a message when setting
1956@code{sc-cite-region-limit} to @code{nil}. The following commands
1957perform these functions on the region of text between @samp{point} and
1958@samp{mark}. Each of them sets the @dfn{undo boundary} before modifying
1959the region so that the command can be undone in the standard Emacs
1960way.@refill
1961
1962A quick note about Emacs 19. Unlike in Emacs 18, the region delimited
1963by @samp{point} and @samp{mark} can have two states. It can be
1964@dfn{active} or @dfn{inactive}. Although Emacs 19 and Lucid Emacs 19
1965use different terminology and functions, both employ the same convention
1966such that when the region is inactive, commands that modify the region
1967should generate an error. The user needs to explicitly activate the
1968region before successfully executing the command. All Supercite
1969commands conform to this convention.
1970
1971Here is the list of Supercite citing commands:
1972
1973@table @asis
1974@findex sc-cite-region
1975@findex cite-region (sc-)
1976@kindex C-c C-p c
1977@vindex sc-pre-cite-hook
1978@vindex pre-cite-hook (sc-)
1979@vindex sc-confirm-always-p
1980@vindex confirm-always-p
1981@kindex C-u
1982@item @code{sc-cite-region} (@kbd{C-c C-p c})
1983@comment
1984This command cites each line in the region of text by interpreting the
1985selected frame from @code{sc-cite-frame-alist}, or the default citing
1986frame @code{sc-default-cite-frame}. It runs the hook
1987@code{sc-pre-cite-hook} before interpreting the frame. With an optional
1988universal argument (@kbd{C-u}), it temporarily sets
1989@code{sc-confirm-always-p} to @code{t} so you can confirm the
1990attribution string for a single manual citing.
1991@xref{Configuring the Citation Engine}.@refill
1992
1993@findex sc-uncite-region
1994@findex uncite-region (sc-)
1995@kindex C-c C-p u
1996@item @code{sc-uncite-region} (@kbd{C-c C-p u})
1997@comment
1998This command removes any citation strings from the beginning of each
1999cited line in the region by interpreting the selected frame from
2000@code{sc-uncite-frame-alist}, or the default unciting frame
2001@code{sc-default-uncite-frame}. It runs the hook
2002@code{sc-pre-uncite-hook} before interpreting the frame.
2003@xref{Configuring the Citation Engine}.@refill
2004
2005@findex sc-recite-region
2006@findex recite-region (sc-)
2007@kindex C-c C-p r
2008@item @code{sc-recite-region} (@kbd{C-c C-p r})
2009@comment
2010This command recites each line the region by interpreting the selected
2011frame from @code{sc-recite-frame-alist}, or the default reciting frame
2012@code{sc-default-recite-frame}. It runs the hook
2013@code{sc-pre-recite-hook} before interpreting the frame.
2014@xref{Configuring the Citation Engine}.@refill
2015
2016@vindex sc-confirm-always-p
2017@vindex confirm-always-p (sc-)
2018Supercite will always ask you to confirm the attribution when reciting a
2019region, regardless of the value of @code{sc-confirm-always-p}.
2020@end table
2021
2022@node Insertion Commands, Variable Toggling Shortcuts, Citing Commands, Post-yank Formatting Commands
2023@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2024@section Insertion Commands
2025@ifinfo
2026
2027@end ifinfo
2028These two functions insert various strings into the reply buffer.
2029
2030@table @asis
2031@findex sc-insert-reference
2032@findex insert-reference (sc-)
2033@kindex C-c C-p w
2034@item @code{sc-insert-reference} (@kbd{C-c C-p w})
2035@comment
2036@vindex sc-preferred-header-style
2037@vindex preferred-header-style (sc-)
2038Inserts a reference header into the reply buffer at @samp{point}. With
2039no arguments, the header indexed by @code{sc-preferred-header-style} is
2040inserted. An optional numeric argument is the index into
2041@code{sc-rewrite-header-list} indicating which reference header to
2042write.@refill
2043
2044With just the universal argument (@kbd{C-u}), electric reference mode is
2045entered, regardless of the value of @code{sc-electric-references-p}.
2046
2047@findex sc-insert-citation
2048@findex insert-citation (sc-)
2049@kindex C-c C-p i
2050@item @code{sc-insert-citation} (@kbd{C-c C-p i})
2051@comment
2052Inserts the current citation string at the beginning of the line that
2053@samp{point} is on. If the line is already cited, Supercite will issue
2054an error and will not cite the line.
2055@end table
2056
2057@node Variable Toggling Shortcuts, Mail Field Commands, Insertion Commands, Post-yank Formatting Commands
2058@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2059@cindex toggling variables
2060@section Variable Toggling Shortcuts
2061@ifinfo
2062
2063@end ifinfo
2064Supercite defines a number of commands that make it easier for you to
2065toggle and set various Supercite variables as you are editing the reply
2066buffer. For example, you may want to turn off filling or whitespace
2067cleanup, but only temporarily. These toggling shortcut commands make
2068this easy to do.
2069
2070@kindex C-c C-p C-t
2071Like Supercite commands in general, the toggling commands are placed on
2072a keymap prefix within the greater Supercite keymap. For the default
2073value of @code{sc-mode-map-prefix}, this will be
2074@kbd{C-c C-p C-t}.@refill
2075
2076The following commands toggle the value of certain Supercite variables
2077which take only a binary value:
2078
2079@table @kbd
2080@item C-c C-p C-t b
2081Toggles the variable @code{sc-mail-nuke-blank-lines-p}.
2082
2083@item C-c C-p C-t c
2084Toggles the variable @code{sc-confirm-always-p}.
2085
2086@item C-c C-p C-t d
2087Toggles the variable @code{sc-downcase-p}.
2088
2089@item C-c C-p C-t e
2090Toggles the variable @code{sc-electric-references-p}.
2091
2092@item C-c C-p C-t f
2093Toggles the variable @code{sc-auto-fill-region-p}.
2094
2095@item C-c C-p C-t o
2096Toggles the variable @code{sc-electric-circular-p}.
2097
2098@item C-c C-p C-t s
2099Toggles the variable @code{sc-nested-citation-p}.
2100
2101@item C-c C-p C-t u
2102Toggles the variable @code{sc-use-only-preferences-p}.
2103
2104@item C-c C-p C-t w
2105Toggles the variable @code{sc-fixup-whitespace-p}.
2106@end table
2107
2108@findex set-variable
2109The following commands let you set the value of multi-value variables,
2110in the same way that Emacs' @code{set-variable} does:
2111
2112@table @kbd
2113@item C-c C-p C-t a
2114Sets the value of the variable @code{sc-preferred-attribution-list}.
2115
2116@item C-c C-p C-t l
2117Sets the value of the variable @code{sc-cite-region-limit}.
2118
2119@item C-c C-p C-t n
2120Sets the value of the variable @code{sc-mail-nuke-mail-headers}.
2121
2122@item C-c C-p C-t N
2123Sets the value of the variable @code{sc-mail-header-nuke-list}.
2124
2125@item C-c C-p C-t p
2126Sets the value of the variable @code{sc-preferred-header-style}.
2127@end table
2128
2129@kindex C-c C-p C-p
2130One special command is provided to toggle both
2131@code{sc-auto-fill-region-p} and @code{sc-fixup-whitespace-p} together.
2132This is because you typically want to run Supercite with either variable
2133as @code{nil} or non-@code{nil}. The command to toggle these variables
2134together is bound on @kbd{C-c C-p C-p}.@refill
2135
2136Finally, the command @kbd{C-c C-p C-t h} (also @kbd{C-c C-p C-t ?})
2137brings up a Help message on the toggling keymap.
177c0ea7 2138
6bf7aab6
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2139
2140@node Mail Field Commands, Miscellaneous Commands, Variable Toggling Shortcuts, Post-yank Formatting Commands
2141@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2142@section Mail Field Commands
2143@ifinfo
2144
2145@end ifinfo
2146These commands allow you to view, modify, add, and delete various bits
2147of information from the info alist.
2148@xref{Information Keys and the Info Alist}.@refill
2149
2150@table @asis
2151@kindex C-c C-p f
2152@findex sc-mail-field-query
2153@findex mail-field-query (sc-)
2154@kindex C-c C-p f
2155@item @code{sc-mail-field-query} (@kbd{C-c C-p f})
2156@comment
2157Allows you to interactively view, modify, add, and delete info alist
2158key-value pairs. With no argument, you are prompted (with completion)
2159for a info key. The value associated with that key is displayed in the
2160minibuffer. With an argument, this command will first ask if you want
2161to view, modify, add, or delete an info key. Viewing is identical to
2162running the command with no arguments.
2163
2164If you want to modify the value of a key, Supercite will first prompt
2165you (with completion) for the key of the value you want to change. It
2166will then put you in the minibuffer with the key's current value so you
2167can edit the value as you wish. When you hit @key{RET}, the key's value
2168is changed. For those of you running Emacs 19, minibuffer history is
2169kept for the values.
2170
2171If you choose to delete a key-value pair, Supercite will prompt you (with
2172completion) for the key to delete.
2173
2174If you choose to add a new key-value pair, Supercite firsts prompts you
2175for the key to add. Note that completion is turned on for this prompt,
2176but you can type any key name here, even one that does not yet exist.
2177After entering the key, Supercite prompts you for the key's value. It
2178is not an error to enter a key that already exists, but the new value
2179will override any old value. It will not replace it though; if you
2180subsequently delete the key-value pair, the old value will reappear.
2181
2182@findex sc-mail-process-headers
2183@findex mail-process-headers (sc-)
2184@kindex C-c C-p g
2185@item @code{sc-mail-process-headers} (@kbd{C-c C-p g})
2186@comment
2187This command lets you re-initialize Supercite's info alist from any set
2188of mail headers in the region between @samp{point} and @samp{mark}.
2189This function is especially useful for replying to digest messages where
2190Supercite will initially set up its information for the digest
2191originator, but you want to cite each component article with the real
2192message author. Note that unless an error during processing occurs, any
2193old information is lost.@refill
2194@end table
2195
2196@node Miscellaneous Commands, Information Keys and the Info Alist, Mail Field Commands, Post-yank Formatting Commands
2197@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2198@section Miscellaneous Commands
2199@ifinfo
2200
2201@end ifinfo
2202@table @asis
2203@findex sc-open-line
2204@findex open-line (sc-)
2205@findex open-line
2206@kindex C-c C-p o
2207@item @code{sc-open-line} (@kbd{C-c C-p o})
2208@comment
2209Similar to Emacs' standard @code{open-line} commands, but inserts the
2210citation string in front of the new line. As with @code{open-line},
2211an optional numeric argument inserts that many new lines.@refill
2212
2213@findex sc-describe
2214@findex describe (sc-)
2215@kindex C-c C-p ?
2216@kindex C-c C-p h
2217@item @code{sc-describe} (@kbd{C-c C-p h} and @kbd{C-c C-p ?})
2218@comment
2219This function has been obsoleted by the @TeX{}info manual you are now
2220reading. It is still provided for compatibility, but it will eventually
2221go away.
2222
2223@findex sc-version
2224@findex version (sc-)
2225@kindex C-c C-p v
2226@item @code{sc-version} (@kbd{C-c C-p v})
2227@comment
2228Echos the version of Supercite you are using. With the optional
2229universal argument (@kbd{C-u}), this command inserts the version
2230information into the current buffer.
2231
2232@findex sc-submit-bug-report
2233@findex submit-bug-report (sc-)
2234@kindex C-c C-p C-b
2235@item @code{sc-submit-bug-report} (@kbd{C-c C-p C-b})
2236@comment
2237If you encounter a bug, or wish to suggest an enhancement, use this
2238command to set up an outgoing mail buffer, with the proper address to
2239the Supercite maintainer automatically inserted in the @samp{To:@:}
2240field. This command also inserts information that the Supercite
2241maintainer can use to recreate your exact setup, making it easier to
2242verify your bug.
2243@end table
2244
2245@node Hints to MUA Authors, Version 3 Changes, Electric References, Top
2246@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2247@chapter Hints to MUA Authors
2248@ifinfo
2249
2250@end ifinfo
2251In June of 1989, some discussion was held between the various MUA
2252authors, the Supercite author, and other Supercite users. These
2253discussions centered around the need for a standard interface between
2254MUAs and Supercite (or any future Supercite-like packages). This
2255interface was formally proposed by Martin Neitzel on Fri, 23 Jun 89, in
2256a mail message to the Supercite mailing list:
2257
2258@example
2259 Martin> Each news/mail-reader should provide a form of
2260 Martin> mail-yank-original that
2261
2262 Martin> 1: inserts the original message incl. header into the
2263 Martin> reply buffer; no indentation/prefixing is done, the header
2264 Martin> tends to be a "full blown" version rather than to be
2265 Martin> stripped down.
2266
2267 Martin> 2: `point' is at the start of the header, `mark' at the
2268 Martin> end of the message body.
2269
2270 Martin> 3: (run-hooks 'mail-yank-hooks)
2271
2272 Martin> [Supercite] should be run as such a hook and merely
2273 Martin> rewrite the message. This way it isn't anymore
2274 Martin> [Supercite]'s job to gather the original from obscure
2275 Martin> sources. [@dots{}]
2276@end example
2277
2278@vindex mail-citation-hook
2279@vindex mail-yank-hooks
2280@cindex sendmail.el
2281@findex mail-yank-original
2282@findex defvar
2283This specification was adopted, but with the recent release of
2284Emacs 19, it has undergone a slight modification. Instead of the
2285variable @code{mail-yank-hooks}, the new preferred hook variable that
2286the MUA should provide is @code{mail-citation-hook}.
2287@code{mail-yank-hooks} can be provided for backward compatibility, but
2288@code{mail-citation-hook} should always take precedence. Richard
2289Stallman (of the FSF) suggests that the MUAs should @code{defvar}
2290@code{mail-citation-hook} to @code{nil} and perform some default citing
2291when that is the case. Take a look at Emacs 19's @file{sendmail.el}
2292file, specifically the @code{mail-yank-original} defun for
2293details.@refill
2294
2295If you are writing a new MUA package, or maintaining an existing MUA
2296package, you should make it conform to this interface so that your users
2297will be able to link Supercite easily and seamlessly. To do this, when
2298setting up a reply or forward buffer, your MUA should follow these
2299steps:
2300
2301@enumerate
177c0ea7 2302@item
6bf7aab6
DL
2303Insert the original message, including the mail headers into the reply
2304buffer. At this point you should not modify the raw text in any way, and
2305you should place all the original headers into the body of the reply.
2306This means that many of the mail headers will be duplicated, one copy
2307above the @code{mail-header-separator} line and one copy below,
2308however there will probably be more headers below this line.@refill
2309
177c0ea7 2310@item
6bf7aab6
DL
2311Set @samp{point} to the beginning of the line containing the first mail
2312header in the body of the reply. Set @samp{mark} at the end of the
2313message text. It is very important that the region be set around the
2314text Supercite is to modify and that the mail headers are within this
2315region. Supercite will not venture outside the region for any reason,
2316and anything within the region is fair game, so don't put anything that
2317@strong{must} remain unchanged inside the region. Further note that for
2318Emacs 19, the region need not be set active. Supercite will work
2319properly when the region is inactive, as should any other like-minded
2320package.@refill
2321
177c0ea7 2322@item
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2323Run the hook @code{mail-citation-hook}. You will probably want to
2324provide some kind of default citation functions in cases where the user
2325does not have Supercite installed. By default, your MUA should
2326@code{defvar} @code{mail-citation-hook} to @code{nil}, and in your
2327yanking function, check its value. If it finds
2328@code{mail-citation-hook} to be @code{nil}, it should perform some
2329default citing behavior. User who want to connect to Supercite then
2330need only add @code{sc-cite-original} to this list of hooks using
2331@code{add-hook}.@refill
2332@end enumerate
2333
2334If you do all this, your users will not need to overload your routines
2335to use Supercite, and your MUA will join the ranks of those that conform
2336to this interface ``out of the box.''
2337
2338@node Version 3 Changes, Thanks and History, Hints to MUA Authors, Top
2339@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2340@chapter Version 3 Changes
2341@ifinfo
2342
2343@end ifinfo
2344@cindex sc-unsupp.el file
2345With version 3, Supercite has undergone an almost complete rewrite, and
2346has hopefully benefited in a number of ways, including vast
2347improvements in the speed of performance, a big reduction in size of the
2348code and in the use of Emacs resources, and a much cleaner and flexible
2349internal architecture. The central construct of the info alist, and its
2350role in Supercite has been expanded, and the other central concept, the
2351general package Regi, was developed to provide a theoretically unlimited
2352flexibility.
2353
2354But most of this work is internal and not of very great importance to the
2355casual user. There have been some changes at the user-visible level,
2356but for the most part, the Supercite configuration variables from
2357version 2 should still be relevant to version 3. Below, I briefly
2358outline those user-visible things that have changed since version 2. For
2359details, look to other sections of this manual.
2360
2361@enumerate
2362@item
2363@cindex supercite.el file
2364@cindex reporter.el file
2365@cindex regi.el file
2366@cindex sc.el from version 2
2367@cindex sc-elec.el from version 2
2368Supercite proper now comes in a single file, @file{supercite.el}, which
2369contains everything except the unsupported noodlings, overloading (which
2370should be more or less obsolete with the release of Emacs 19), and the
2371general lisp packages @file{reporter.el} and @file{regi.el}. Finally,
2372the @TeX{}info manual comes in its own file as well. In particular, the
2373file @file{sc.el} from the version 2 distribution is obsolete, as is the
2374file @file{sc-elec.el}.
2375
2376@item
2377@code{sc-spacify-name-chars} is gone in version 3.
2378
2379@item
2380@vindex sc-attrib-selection-list
2381@vindex attrib-selection-list
2382@code{sc-nickname-alist} is gone in version 3. The
2383@code{sc-attrib-selection-list} is a more general construct supporting
2384the same basic feature.
2385
2386@item
2387The version 2 variable @code{sc-preferred-attribution} has been changed
2388to @code{sc-preferred-attribution-list}, and has been expanded upon to
2389allow you to specify an ordered list of preferred attributions.
2390
2391@item
2392@code{sc-mail-fields-list} has been removed, and header nuking in
2393general has been greatly improved, giving you wider flexibility in
2394specifying which headers to keep and remove while presenting a
2395simplified interface to commonly chosen defaults.
2396
2397@item
2398Post-yank paragraph filling has been completely removed from Supercite,
2399other packages just do it better than Supercite ever would. Supercite
2400will still fill newly cited paragraphs.
2401
2402@item
2403@vindex sc-cite-region-limit
2404@vindex cite-region-limit
2405The variable @code{sc-all-but-cite-p} has been replaced by
2406@code{sc-cite-region-limit}.
2407
2408@item
2409Keymap hacking in the reply buffer has been greatly simplified, with, I
2410believe, little reduction in functionality.
2411
2412@item
2413Hacking of the reply buffer's docstring has been completely eliminated.
2414@end enumerate
2415
2416@node Thanks and History, The Supercite Mailing List, Version 3 Changes, Top
2417@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2418@chapter Thanks and History
2419@ifinfo
2420
2421@end ifinfo
2422The Supercite package was derived from its predecessor Superyank 1.11
2423which was inspired by various bits of code and ideas from Martin Neitzel
2424and Ashwin Ram. They were the folks who came up with the idea of
2425non-nested citations and implemented some rough code to provide this
2426style. Superyank and Supercite version 2 evolved to the point where much
2427of the attribution selection mechanism was automatic, and features have
2428been continuously added through the comments and suggestions of the
2429Supercite mailing list participants. Supercite version 3 represents a
2430nearly complete rewrite with many of the algorithms and coding styles
2431being vastly improved. Hopefully Supercite version 3 is faster,
2432smaller, and much more flexible than its predecessors.
2433
2434In the version 2 manual I thanked some specific people for their help in
2435developing Supercite 2. You folks know who you are and your continued
2436support is greatly appreciated. I wish to thank everyone on the
2437Supercite mailing list, especially the brave alpha testers, who helped
2438considerably in testing out the concepts and implementation of Supercite
2439version 3. Special thanks go out to the MUA and Emacs authors Kyle
2440Jones, Stephen Gildea, Richard Stallman, and Jamie Zawinski for coming
2441to a quick agreement on the new @code{mail-citation-hook} interface, and
2442for adding the magic lisp to their code to support this.
2443
2444All who have helped and contributed have been greatly appreciated.
2445
2446@node The Supercite Mailing List, Concept Index, Thanks and History, Top
2447@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2448@cindex supercite mailing list address
2449@cindex mailing list address
2450@chapter The Supercite Mailing List
2451@ifinfo
2452
2453@end ifinfo
2454The author runs a simple mail expanding mailing list for discussion of
2455issues related to Supercite. This includes enhancement requests, bug
2456reports, general help questions, etc. To subscribe or unsubscribe to
2457the mailing list, send a request to the administrative address:
2458
2459@example
2460supercite-request@@python.org
2461@end example
2462
2463Please be sure to include the most reliable and shortest (preferably
2464Internet) address back to you. To post articles to the list, send your
2465message to this address (you do not need to be a member to post, but be
2466sure to indicate this in your article or replies may not be CC'd to
2467you):
2468
2469@example
2470supercite@@python.org
2471@end example
2472
2473If you are sending bug reports, they should go to the following address,
2474but @emph{please}! use the command @code{sc-submit-bug-report} since it
2475will be much easier for me to duplicate your problem if you do so. It
2476will set up a mail buffer automatically with this address on the
2477@samp{To:@:} line:
2478
2479@example
2480supercite-help@@python.org
2481@end example
2482
2483@node Concept Index, Command Index, The Supercite Mailing List, Top
2484@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2485@unnumbered Concept Index
2486@printindex cp
2487
2488@node Command Index, Key Index, Concept Index, Top
2489@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2490@unnumbered Command Index
2491@ifinfo
2492
2493@end ifinfo
2494Since all supercite commands are prepended with the string
2495``@code{sc-}'', each appears under its @code{sc-}@var{command} name and
2496its @var{command} name.
2497@iftex
2498@sp 2
2499@end iftex
2500@printindex fn
2501
2502@node Key Index, Variable Index, Command Index, Top
2503@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2504@unnumbered Key Index
2505@printindex ky
2506
2507@node Variable Index, , Key Index, Top
2508@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2509@unnumbered Variable Index
2510@ifinfo
2511
2512@end ifinfo
2513Since all supercite variables are prepended with the string
2514``@code{sc-}'', each appears under its @code{sc-}@var{variable} name and
2515its @var{variable} name.
2516@iftex
2517@sp 2
2518@end iftex
2519@printindex vr
56f7c94a 2520@setchapternewpage odd
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2521@summarycontents
2522@contents
2523@bye
6b61353c
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2524
2525@ignore
2526 arch-tag: 0521847a-4680-44b6-ae6e-13ce20e18436
2527@end ignore