@c \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
@c Uncomment 1st line before texing this file alone.
@c %**start of header
-@c Copyright (C) 1995, 2001-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+@c Copyright (C) 1995, 2001-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c
@setfilename gnus-faq.info
@settitle Frequently Asked Questions
@subsubheading Answer
Gnus is released independent from releases of Emacs and XEmacs.
-Therefore, the version bundled with Emacs or the version in XEmacs'
+Therefore, the version bundled with Emacs or the version in XEmacs's
package system might not be up to date (e.g. Gnus 5.9 bundled with Emacs
21 is outdated).
You can get the latest released version of Gnus from
@subsubheading Answer
This message means that the last time you used Gnus, it
-wasn't properly exited and therefor couldn't write its
-informations to disk (e.g. which messages you read), you
-are now asked if you want to restore those informations
+wasn't properly exited and therefore couldn't write its
+information to disk (e.g. which messages you read), you
+are now asked if you want to restore that information
from the auto-save file.
To prevent this message make sure you exit Gnus
The first thing you've got to do is to
create a suitable directory (no blanks in directory name
please) e.g. c:\myhome. Then you must set the environment
-variable HOME to this directory. To do this under Win9x
+variable HOME to this directory. To do this under Windows 9x
or Me include the line
@example
it should store the mail, in Gnus terminology which back end
to use. Gnus supports many different back ends, the most
commonly used one is nnml. It stores every mail in one file
-and is therefor quite fast. However you might prefer a one
+and is therefore quite fast. However you might prefer a one
file per group approach if your file system has problems with
many small files, the nnfolder back end is then probably the
choice for you. To use nnml add the following to ~/.gnus.el:
@end example
@noindent
-Now we need to tell Gnus, where to get it's mail from. If
+Now we need to tell Gnus, where to get its mail from. If
it's a POP3 server, then you need something like this:
@example
@subsubheading Answer
You've got to play around with the variable
-gnus-summary-line-format. It's value is a string of
+gnus-summary-line-format. Its value is a string of
symbols which stand for things like author, date, subject
etc. A list of the available specifiers can be found in the
manual node "Summary Buffer Lines" and the often forgotten
-node "Formatting Variables" and it's sub-nodes. There
+node "Formatting Variables" and its sub-nodes. There
you'll find useful things like positioning the cursor and
tabulators which allow you a summary in table form, but
sadly hard tabulators are broken in 5.8.8.
in Gnus. Here comes nnir into action. Nnir is a front end
to search engines like swish-e or swish++ and
others. You index your mail with one of those search
-engines and with the help of nnir you can search trough
+engines and with the help of nnir you can search through
the indexed mail and generate a temporary group with all
messages which met your search criteria. If this sound
cool to you get nnir.el from
@subsubheading Answer
-There's not only the Gnus manual but also the manuals
-for message, emacs-mime, sieve and pgg. Those packages
-are distributed with Gnus and used by Gnus but aren't
-really part of core Gnus, so they are documented in
-different info files, you should have a look in those
-manuals, too.
+There's not only the Gnus manual but also the manuals for message,
+emacs-mime, sieve, EasyPG Assistant, and pgg. Those packages are
+distributed with Gnus and used by Gnus but aren't really part of core
+Gnus, so they are documented in different info files, you should have
+a look in those manuals, too.
@node FAQ 8-3
@subsubheading Question 8.3
@subsubheading Answer
-The reason for this could be the way Gnus reads it's
+The reason for this could be the way Gnus reads its
active file, see the node "The Active File" in the Gnus
manual for things you might try to speed the process up.
An other idea would be to byte compile your ~/.gnus.el (say