nn - efficient net news interface (No News is good news)
nn [ options ] [ newsgroup | +folder |
file ]...
nn -g [ -r ]
nn -a0 [ newsgroup ]...
Net news is a world-wide information exchange service covering
numerous topics in science and every day life. Topics are organized in
news groups, and these groups are open for everybody to post
articles on a subject related to the topic of the group.
Nn is a `point-and-shoot' net news interface program, or a
news reader for short (not to be confused with the human news
reader). When you use nn, you can decide which of the many news
groups you are interested in, and you can unsubscribe to those which don't
interest you. nn will let you read the new (and old) articles in each
of the groups you subscribe to using a menu based article selection prior to
reading the articles in the news group.
When a news group is entered, nn will locate all the
presently unread articles in the group, and extract their sender, subject,
and other relevant information. This information is then rearranged, sorted,
and marked in various ways to give it a pleasant format when it is presented
on the screen.
This will be done very quickly, because nn uses the NOV
database via the NNTP XOVER command. The news server to use can be
overridden by setting the environment variable $NNTPSERVER to the
name of the system (such as news.newserver.com), or by setting the
variable nntp-server (on the command line only, since it is looked at
before the init file), as "nntp-server=news.some.domain"). If you
use multiple servers, you probably want to set the nn-directory and
newsrc variables on the command line to an alternate names as well,
since some of the data files are server dependent. If you are using a slow
tcp link (such as ppp over a modem) and NNTP, see the
NOTES section at the end of this manual.
When the article menu appears on the screen, nn will be in
a mode called selection mode. In this mode, the articles which seems
to be interesting can be selected by single keystrokes (using the keys a-z
and 0-9). When all the interesting articles among the ones presently
displayed have been selected, the space bar is hit, which causes nn
to enter reading mode.
In reading mode, each of the selected articles will be
presented. You use the space bar to go on to the next page of the
current article, or to the next article. Of course, there are all sorts of
commands to scroll text up and down, skip to the next article, responding to
an article, decrypt an article, and so on.
When all the selected articles in the current group have been
read, the last hit on the space bar will cause nn will continue to
the next group with unread articles, and enter selection mode on that
group.
nn accepts a lot of command line options, but here only the
frequently used options are described. Options can also be set permanently
by including appropriate variable settings in the init file
described later. All options are described in the section on Command Line
Options towards the end of this manual.
The frequently used command line options are:
- -a0
- Catch up on unread articles and groups. See the section "Catch
up" below.
- -g
- Prompt for the name of a news group or folder to be entered (with
completion).
- -r
- Used with -g to repeatedly prompt for groups to enter.
- -lN
- Print only the first N lines of the first page of each article
before prompting to continue. This is useful on slow terminals and modem
lines to be able to see the first few lines of longer articles.
- -sWORD
- Collect only articles which contain the string WORD in their
subject (case is ignored). This is normally combined with the -x and -m
options to find all articles on a specific subject.
- -s/regexp
- Collect only articles whose subject matches the regular expression
regexp. This is normally combined with the -x and -m options to
find all articles on a specific subject.
- -nWORD or -n/regexp
- Same as -s except that it matches on the sender's name instead of
the article's subject. This is normally combined with the -x and -m
options to find all articles from a specific author. It cannot be mixed
with the -s option!
- -i
- Normally searches with -n and -s are case independent. Using
this option, the case becomes significant.
- -m
- Merge all articles into one `meta group' instead of showing them one group
at a time. This is normally used together with the -x and -s options to
get all the articles on a specific subject presented on a single menu
(when you don't care about which group they belong to). When -m is used,
no articles will be marked as read.
- -x[N]
- Present (or scan) all (or the last N) unread as well as read
articles. When this option is used, nn will never mark
unread articles as read (i.e. .newsrc is not updated).
- -X
- Read/scan unsubscribed groups also. Most useful when looking for a
specific subject in all groups, e.g.
nn -mxX -sSubject all
- news.group
or file or +folder
- If none of these arguments are given, all subscribed news groups will be
used. Otherwise, only the specified news groups and/or files will be
collected and presented. In specifying a news groups, the following `meta
notation' can be used:
If the news group ends with a `.' (or `.all'), all subgroups of the news
group will be collected, e.g.
comp.sources.
If a news group starts with a `.' (or `all.'), all the matching subgroups
will be collected, e.g.
.sources.unix
The argument `all' identifies all (subscribed) news groups.
In general, nn commands consist of one or two key-strokes,
and nn reacts instantly to the commands you give it; you don't have
to enter return after each command (except where explicitly
stated).
Some commands have more serious effects than others, and therefore
nn requests you to confirm the command. You confirm by hitting the
the y key, and reject by hitting the n key. Some `trivial'
requests may also be confirmed simply by hitting space. For example,
to confirm the creation of a save file, just hit space, but if one or
more directories also have to be created, you must enter y.
Many commands will require that you enter a line of text, e.g. a
file name or a shell command. If you enter space as the first
character on a line, the line will be filled with a default value (if one is
defined). For example, the default value for a file name is the last file
name you have entered, and the default shell command is your previous shell
command. You can edit this default value as well as a directly typed text,
using the following editing commands. The erase, kill, and
interrupt keys are the keys defined by the current tty settings. On
systems without job control, the suspend key will be control-Z
while it is the current suspend character on system with job control.
- erase
-
Delete the last character on the line.
- delete-word
(normally ^W)
-
Delete the last word or component of the input.
- kill
-
Delete all characters on the line.
- interrupt and
control-G
-
Cancel the command which needs the input.
- suspend
- Suspend nn if supported by the system. Otherwise, spawn an
interactive shell.
- return
-
Terminate the line, and continue with the command.
Related variables: erase-key, flow-control,
flush-typeahead, help-key, kill-key, word-key.
There are numerous commands in nn, and most of them can be
invoked by a single keystroke. The descriptions in this manual are based on
the standard bindings of the commands to the keys, but it is possible to
customize these using the map command described later. For each of
the keystroke commands described in this manual, the corresponding command
name will also be shown in curly braces, e.g. {command}.
The following commands work in both selection mode and in reading
mode. The notation ^X means `control X':
- ? {help}
- Help. Gives a one page overview of the commands available in the current
mode.
- ^L {redraw}
- Redraw screen.
- ^R {redraw}
- Redraw screen (Same as ^L).
- ^P {message}
- Repeat the last message shown on the message line. The command can be
repeated to successively show previous messages (the maximum number of
saved messages is controlled via the message-history
variable.)
- ! {shell}
- Shell escape. The user is prompted for a command which is executed by your
favorite shell (see the shell variable). Shell escapes are
described in detail later on.
- Q {quit}
- Quit nn. When you use this command, you neither lose unread
articles in the current group nor the selections you might have made
(unless the articles are expired in the meantime of course).
- V {version}
- Print release and version information.
- :command {command}
- Execute the command by name. This form can be used to invoke any of
nn's commands, also those which cannot be bound to a key (such as
:coredump), or those which are not bound to a key by default (such
as post and unshar).
Related and basic variables: backup, backup-suffix,
confirm-auto-quit, expert, mail, message-history, new-group-action, newsrc,
quick-count.
In selection mode, the screen is divided into four parts: the
header line showing the name of the news group and the number of articles,
the menu lines which show the collected articles - one article per line, the
prompt line where you enter commands, and the message line where nn
prints various messages to you.
Each menu line begins with an article id which is a unique
letter (or digit if your screen can show more than 26 menu lines). To select
an articles for reading, you simply enter the corresponding id, and
the menu line will be high-lighted to indicate that the article is selected.
When you have selected all the interesting articles on the present menu, you
simply hit space.
If there are more articles collected for the current group than
could be presented on one screenful of text, you will be presented with the
next portion of articles to select from. When you have had the opportunity
to select among all the articles in the group, hitting space will
enter reading mode.
If no articles have been selected in the current group, hitting
space will enter selection mode on the next news group, or exit
nn if the current group was the last news group with unread articles.
It is thus possible to go through ALL unread articles (without reading any
of them) just by hitting space a few times.
The articles will be presented on the menu using one of the
following layouts:
- 0:
- x Name......... Subject.............. +123
- 1:
- x Name......... 123 Subject..............
- 2:
- x 123 Subject...................................
- 3:
- x Subject...........................................
- 4:
- x Subject........................................
Here x is the letter or digit that must be entered to
select the article, Name is the real name of the sender (or the mail
address if the real name cannot be found), Subject is the contents of
the "Subject:" line in the article, and 123 is the number
of lines in the article.
Layout 0 and 1 are just two ways to present the same information,
while layout 2 and 3 are intended for groups whose articles have very long
subject lines, e.g. comp.sources.
Layout 4 is a hybrid between layout 1 and 3. It will normally use
layout 1, but it will use layout 3 (with a little indentation) for menu
lines where the subject is longer than the space available with layout
1.
Layout 1 is the default layout, and an alternative menu line
layout is selected using the -L option or by setting the
layout variable. Once nn is started the layout can be changed
at any time using the " key {layout}.
The Name is limited to 16 characters, and to make maximum
use of this space, nn will perform a series of simplifications on the
name, e.g. changing first names into initials, removing domain names from
mail addresses (if the real name is not found) etc. It does a good job, but
some people on the net put weird things into the From: field (or actually
into their password file) which result in nn producing quite cryptic,
and sometimes funny "names".
One a usual 80 column terminal, the Subject is limited to
about 60 characters (75 in layout 3) and is thus only an approximation to
the actual subject line which may be much longer. To get as much out of this
space, Re: prefixes (in various forms) are recognized and replaced by
a single `>' character (see the re-layout variable).
Since articles are sorted according to the subject, two or more
adjacent articles may share the same subject (ignoring any `>'s). In this
case, only the first article will show the subject of the article; the rest
will only show the `>' character in the subject field (or a `-' if there
is no `>' at the beginning of the line). A typical menu will thus only
show each subject once, saving a lot of time in scanning the news
articles.
If consolidated menus (see section below) are enabled,
adjacent articles sharing the same subject will be shown with a
single line on the menu corresponding to the first of the
articles. The number of articles with the same subject will be shown as a
braketed number in front of the subject, e.g. with layout 1:
x Name......... 123 [4] Subject..............
For further information see the section on consolidated menus below.
Related variables: collapse-subject, columns,
confirm-entry, confirm-entry-limit, entry-report-limit, fsort, kill, layout,
limit, lines, long-menu, re-layout, repeat, slow-mode, sort, sort-mode,
split, subject-match-limit, subject-match-offset, subject-match-parts,
subject-match-minimum.
While nn is running and between invocations, nn
associates an attribute with each article on your system. These
attributes are used to differentiate between read and unread articles,
selected articles, articles marked for later treatment, etc. Depending on
how nn is configured, these attributes can be saved between
invocations of nn, or some of them may only be used while nn
is running.
The attribute is shown on the menu using either a single character
following the article id or by high-lighting the menu line, depending
on the attribute and the capabilities of the terminal. You can also change
the attributes to your own taste (see the attributes variable).
The attribute of an article can be changed explicitly using the
selection mode commands described below, or it will change automatically for
example when you have read or saved a selected article. If a command may
change any article attributes, it will be noted in the description of the
command. The following descriptions of the attributes will only mention the
most important commands that may set (or preserve) the attribute.
The following attributes may be associated with an article:
- read
- Menu attribute "." - indicates that the article has been read or
saved. When you leave the group, these articles will be marked permanently
read, and are not presented the next time you enter the group.
- seen
- Menu attribute "," - indicates that the article is unread, but
that it has been presented on a menu. Depending on how nn is
configured, these articles will automatically be marked read when
you leave the group, they may remain seen, or they may just be
unread the next time you enter the group (see the
auto-junk-seen, confirm-junk-seen, and
retain-seen-status variables).
Only the commands continue (space) and
read-skip (X) will mark unread articles on the
current (or all) menu pages as seen when they are used. Other
commands that scroll through the menu pages or enter reading mode will
let unread articles remain unread.
- unread
- Menu attribute " " - indicates an unread article. These articles
were unread when you entered the group, and they may remain unread when
you leave the group, unless they have been marked seen by the
command that you used to leave the group or enter reading mode.
- selected
- Menu line high-lighted (or menu attribute "*") - indicates that
you have selected the article. If you leave the group, the selected
articles will remain selected the next time you enter the group. When you
have read a selected article, the attribute will automatically change to
read.
- auto-selected
- These articles have the same appearance as selected articles on the
menu, and the only difference is that these articles have been selected
automatically via the auto-selection facility rather than manually by you.
Very few commands differentiate between these attributes and if they do,
it is explicitly stated in this manual. The main difference is that these
articles are only marked as unread when you leave the group
(supposing they will also be auto-selected the next the group is entered).
This simplifies the house-keeping between invocations of nn.
- leave
- Menu attribute "+" - indicates that the article is marked for
later treatment by the leave-article (l) command. These
articles may be selected (on demand) when you have read all selected
articles in a group. However, if you do not select them then immediately,
they are stored as the leave-next attribute described below.
- leave-next
- Menu attribute "=" - indicates that the article is marked for
later treatment by the leave-next (L) command. This is a
permanent attribute, which will remain on the article until you either
read the article, change the attribute, or it is expired. So assigning
this attribute to an article will effectively keep it unread until
you do something. If the variable select-leave-next is set,
nn will ask whether these articles should be selected on
entry to a group (but naturally, doing so will change the
leave-next attribute to select).
- cancelled
- Menu attribute "#" - indicates that the article has been
cancelled. This is mainly useful when tidying a folder; it is set by the
cancel (C) command, and can be cleared by any command that
change attributes, e.g. you can select and deselect the article.
- killed
- Menu attribute "!" - indicates that the article has been killed
(e.g. by the K {kill-select} command). Killed articles are
immediately removed from the menu, so you should not normally see articles
with this attribute. If you do, report it as a bug!
The attributes are saved in two files: .newsrc (read
articles) and .nn/select (other attributes). Plain unread articles
are saved by not occurring in either of these files. Both files are
described in more detail later on.
Related variables: attributes, auto-junk-seen,
confirm-junk-seen, retain-seen-status, select-leave-next.
The primary purpose of the selection mode is of course to select
the articles to be read, but numerous other commands may also be performed
in this mode: saving of articles in files, replying and following up on
articles, mailing/forwarding articles, shell escapes etc.
As described above, the selected articles are marked either
by showing the corresponding menu line in standout mode (reverse video), or
if the terminal does not have this capability by placing an asterisk (*)
after the selection letter or digit.
Most commands which are used to select articles will work as
toggle commands. If the article is not already selected, the
selectedattribute on the article(s), independent on the previous
attribute. Otherwise, the article(s) will be deselected and marked
unread. Consequently, any article can be marked unread simply
be selecting and deselecting it.
During selection, the cursor will normally be placed on the
article following the last article whose attribute was changed (initially
the first article). The article pointed out by the cursor is called the
current article, and the following commands work relative to the
current article and cursor position.
- abc...z 01..9
{article N}
- The article with the given identification letter or digit is selected or
deselected. The following article becomes the current article. If the
variable auto-select-subject is set, all articles with the same
subject as the given article are selected.
- . {select}
- Select or deselect the current article and move the cursor to the next
article.
- , {line+1}
- Move the cursor to the next article. You can use the down arrow as
well.
- / {line-1}
- Move cursor to previous article. You can use the up arrow as
well.
- * {select-subject}
- Select or deselect all articles with same subject as current article. This
will work across several menu pages if necessary.
- -x {select-range}
- Select or deselect the range of articles between the current article and
the article specified by x. For example you can select all articles
from e to k by simply typing e-k.
The following commands may change the attributes on all articles
on the current menu page, or on all articles on all menu pages.
- @ {select-invert}
-
Reverse selections. All selected articles on the current page are
deselected, and vice-versa. (Use the find command to select all
articles.)
- ~ {unselect-all}
- Deselect all auto-selected articles in the group (this works across
all menu pages). If the command is executed twice, the selected
articles will also be deselected.
- + {select-auto}
- Perform auto-selections in the group (see the section on "auto
kill/select" below).
- = {find}
- Prompts for a regular expression, and selects all articles on the menu
(all pages) which matches the regular expression. Depending on the
variable select-on-sender matching is performed against the subject
(default) or the sender of the articles. An empty answer (= return)
will reuse the previous expression. Example: The command = . return
will select all articles in the group.
- J {junk-articles}
- This is a very versatile command which can be used to perform all sorts of
attribute changes, either on individual articles, all articles on the
current menu page, all articles with a specific attribute, or all
available articles. To access all the functions of this command, the
J key may have to be hit up to four times, to loop through
different one-line menus. The full functionality of the
junk-articles command is described in a separate section
below.
- L {leave-next}
- This is a specialized version of the generic J
{junk-articles} command to set the leave-next attribute on a
subset of the articles on the menu. It is also described further
below.
The following commands move between the pages belonging to the
same news group when there are more articles than will fit on a single page.
These commands will not change any article attributes.
- > {page+1}
- Goto next menu page.
- < {page-1}
- Goto previous menu page, or to last menu page if on first menu page.
- $ {page=$}
- Goto last menu page.
- ^ {page=1}
- Goto first menu page.
The following commands are used to enter reading mode for the
selected articles, and to move between news groups (in selection mode). They
may change article attributes if noted below.
- space {continue}
- Continue to next menu page, or if on last menu page, read the selected
articles. If no articles have been selected, continue to the next news
group. The unread articles on the current menu page will
automatically be marked seen.
- return {continue-no-mark}
- Identical to the continue command, except that the unread
articles on the current menu page will remain unread. (The
newline key has the same effect).
- Z {read-return}
- Enter reading mode immediately with the currently selected
articles. When all articles have been read, return to selection mode in
the current group. It will mark selected articles
read as they are read, but unread articles are not normally
changed (can be controlled with the variable
marked-by-read-return.)
- X {read-skip}
- Mark all unmarked articles seen on all menu pages (or the
pages defined by the marked-by-read-skip variable), and enter
reading mode immediately with the currently selected articles. As
the selected articles are read, they are marked read. When all
selected articles have been read, nn will enter selection mode in
the next news group. When no articles are selected, it
goes directly to the next group. This can be used to skip all the
articles in a large news group without having to go through all the menu
pages.
If you don't want to read the current group now, but want to keep
it for later, you can use the following commands which will only mark
seen and read articles as read. Currently selected articles
will still be selected the next time you enter the group. None of these
commands will change any attributes themselves (by default).
- N {next-group}
- Go forward to the next group in the presentation sequence. If the variable
marked-by-next-group is set articles on the menu can optionally be
marked seen
- P {previous}
- Go back to the previous group. This command will enter selection mode on
the last active group (two P commands in sequence will bring you to the
current group). If there are still some unread articles in the
group, only those articles will be shown. Otherwise, all the articles
which were unread when nn was invoked will be shown marked with the
read attribute (which can be changed as usual).
As described in the "Article Attributes" section, the
read and seen articles will normally be marked read when you
leave the group, and these articles are not shown the next time you enter
the group.
In all releases prior to release 6.4, it was impossible to have
individual articles in a group marked unread when you left a group,
and the default behaviour of release 6.4 onwards will closely match the
traditional behaviour. This means that the seen and read
articles are treated alike for most practical purposes with the default
variable settings.
If you don't like nn to silently mark the seen
articles read, you can set the variable confirm-junk-seen to
get nn to prompt you for confirmation before doing this, or you can
unset the variable auto-junk-seen to simply keep the seen
articles for the next time you enter the group. You then have to use the
J {junk-articles} to mark articles read.
Using return {continue-no-mark} will also allow you
to keep articles unread rather than marking them seen when
scrolling through the menu pages and entering reading mode. If this is your
preferred reading style, you can remap space to this command.
Related variables: auto-junk-seen, auto-preview-mode,
auto-select-subject, case-fold-search, confirm-auto-quit, confirm-entry,
confirm-junk-seen, marked-by-next-group, marked-by-read-return,
marked-by-read-skip, retain-seen-status, select-on-sender.
Normally, nn will use one menu line for each article, so if
there are many articles with identical subjects, each menu page will only
contain a few different subjects. To have each subject occur only once on
the menu, nn can operate with consolidated menus by setting the
variable consolidated-menu.
When consolidated menus are used, nn operates with two
kinds of subjects: open and closed.
An open subject is a subject which is shown in the
traditional way with one menu line for each article with the given subject.
In other words, when consolidated menus are not used, all subjects are open
(by default).
A closed subject is a multi-article subject which is
presented by a single menu line. This line will be the normal menu line for
the first (oldest) article with the subject, but with the subject field
annotated with a bracketed number showing the number of articles with that
subject, e.g.
a Kim F. Storm 12 [4] Future plans for nn
b.Kim F. Storm 43 [3] More plans for nn
In this example, there are four unread articles with subject `a'
of which the first is posted by me and has 12 lines. The rest of the
articles are hidden, and will only be shown on request. The `.' marker on
subject `b' shows that all three articles within that subject have been read
(or seen).
To select (or deselect) ALL the articles within a closed subject,
simply select the article shown on the menu; this will automatically select
(or deselect) the rest (see auto-select-closed). When all the unread
articles within a closed subject are selected, the menu line will be
high-lighted.
If you want to view the individual articles in a subject (maybe to
select individual articles), you can open the subject with the commands:
- (x
- Open subject x on menu.
- ((
- Open current subject.
When you have completed viewing the opened subject, you can close
it again using the commands:
- )x
- Close subject x on menu (x is any article with the
subject).
- ))
- Close current subject.
In the basic layout of the menu line for a closed subject as shown
above, ALL articles in the closed subject are supposed to be either:
- unread
- The menu line is not high-lighted.
- selected
- Menu line is fully high-lighted (if all UNREAD are selected).
- read/seen
- There is a `.' (read attribute) following the article id.
If neither of these cases apply, i.e. there is a mixture of
unread, selected, and seen/read articles, the bracketed number will have one
of the following formats:
- [U:T]
- There are U unread articles of T total (U<T).
- [S/T]
- There are S selected articles of T total (S<U=T).
- [S/U:T]
- There are S selected of U unread of T total (S<U<T).
If there are any selected articles (S>0), the information
between the brackets will be high-lighted (to show that something is
selected, but not all the unread articles).
Notice: Consolidated menus only work with the `subject' and
`lexical' sorting methods.
Variables related to consolidated menus are: auto-select-closed,
consolidated-menu, counter-delim-left, counter-delim-right, counter-padding,
save-closed-mode.
The J {junk-articles} command is a very flexible
command which can perform all sorts of attribute changes, either on
individual articles, all articles on the current menu page, all articles
with a specific attribute, or all available articles.
To access all the functions of this command, the J key may
have to be hit up to four times, to loop through different one-line
menus:
- Mark Read
- This submenu allows you to mark articles read.
- Unmark
- This submenu allows you to mark articles unread.
- Select
- This submenu allows you to select articles based on their attribute.
- Kill
- This submenu allows you to mark articles read and remove them from
the menu based on their attribute.
The L {leave-next} command is an extension of the
J command with a fifth menu:
- Leave
- This menu allows you to mark articles for later handling with the
leave-next attribute which will keep the article unread until you
explicitly change the attribute (e.g. by reading it) or it is
expired.
For each of these submenus, nn will list the most plausible
choices you may use, but all of the following answers can be used at all
submenus. When you have entered a choice, nn will afterward ask
whether the change should be made to all menu pages or only the current
page.
- J
- Show next submenu.
- L
- Change attribute on all leave articles.
- N
- Change attribute on all leave-next articles.
- R
- Change attribute on all read articles.
- S
- Change attribute on all seen articles.
- U
- Change attribute on all unmarked (i.e. unread) articles.
- A
- Change attribute on all articles no matter their current
attribute.
- *
- Change attribute on all selected articles on the current
page.
- +
- Change attribute on all selected articles on all pages.
- a-z0-9
- Change attribute on one or more specific articles on the current page. You
end the list of articles by a space or by using one of the other
choices described above.
- .
- Change attribute on current article.
- , /
- Move the current article down or up the menu without changing any
attributes.
In reading mode, the selected articles are presented one
page at a time. To get the next page of an article, simply hit space,
and when you are on the last page of an article, hit space to get to
the next selected article. Articles are normally marked read when you go to
the next article, while going back to the menu, quitting nn, etc.
will retain the attribute on the current article.
When you are on the last page of the last article, hit
space to enter selection mode on the next group (or the current group
if reading mode was entered using the Z command).
To read an article, the following text scrolling commands are
available:
- space {continue}
- Scroll one page forward or continue with the next article or group
as described above.
- backspace /
delete {page-1}
- Go one page backwards in article.
- d {page+1/2}
- Scroll one half page forward.
- u {page-1/2}
- Go one half page backwards.
- return {line+1}
- Scroll one line forward in the article.
- tab {skip-lines}
- Skip over lines starting with the same character as the last line on the
current page. This is useful to skip over included text or to the next
file in a shell archive.
- ^ {page=1}
- Move to the first page (excluding the header) of the article.
- $ {page=$}
- Move to the last page of the article.
- gN {line=@}
- Move to line N in the article.
- /regexp {find}
- Search forward for text matching the regular expression regexp in
the article. If a matching text is found, it will be high-lighted.
- . {find-next}
- Repeat search for last regular expression.
- h {page=0}
- Show the header of the article, and continue from the top of the
article.
- H {full-digest}
- If the current article is extracted from a digest, show the entire digest
article including its header. Another H command will return to the
current subarticle.
- D {rot13}
- Turn rot13 (caesar) decryption on and off for the current article,
and redraw current page. If the article is saved while it is decrypted on
the screen, it will be saved in decrypted form as well!
- c {compress}
- Turn compression on and off for the current article and redraw current
page. With compression turned on, multiple spaces and tabs are shown as a
single space. This makes it much easier to read right justified text which
separate words with several spaces. (See also the compress
variable)
The following commands are used to move among the selected
articles.
- n {next-article}
- Move to next selected article. This command skips the rest of the current
article, marks it read, and jumps directly to the first page of the
next selected article (or to the next group if it was the last selected
article).
- l {leave-article}
- Mark the current article with the leave attribute and continue with
the next selected article. When all the selected articles in the current
group have been read, these left over articles can be automatically
selected and shown once more, or the treatment can be postponed to the
next time you enter the group.
This is particularly useful if you see an article which you may want to
respond to unless one the following articles is already saying what you
intended to say.
- L {leave-next}
- Mark the current article with the leave-next attribute and continue
with the next selected article.
- p {previous}
- Goto previous article.
- k {next-subject}
- Kill subject. Skips rest of current article, and all following articles
with the same subject. The skipped articles are marked read. To
kill a subject permanently use the K command.
- * {select-subject}
- Show next article with same subject (even if it is not selected).
This command will select all following articles with the same
subject as the current article (similar to the `*' command in selection
mode). This can be used to select only the first article on a subject in
selection mode, and then select all follow-ups in reading mode if you find
the article interesting.
- a {advance-article}
- Goto the following article on the menu even if it is not selected. This
command skips the rest of the current article and jumps directly to the
first page of the next article (it will not skip to the next group if it
is the last article). The attribute on the current article will be
restored, except for the unread attribute which will be changed to
seen.
- b {back-article}
- Goto the article before current article on the menu even if it is not
selected. This is similar to the a command, except for the
direction.
The following commands perform an immediate return from reading
mode to selection mode in the current group or skip to the next
group.
- = {goto-menu}
- Return to selection mode in the current group (think of = as the
"icon" of the selection menu). The articles read so far will be
marked read.
- N {next-group}
- Skip the rest of the selected and unread articles in the
current group and go directly to the next group. Only the read (and
seen) articles in the current group are marked as read.
- X {read-skip}
- Mark all articles in the current group as read and go directly to
the next group. (You will be asked to confirm this command.)
Related variables: case-fold-search, charset, compress,
data-bits, date, header-lines, mark-overlap, monitor, overlap,
scroll-clear-page, stop, trusted-escape-codes, wrap-header-margin.
In selection mode, it is possible to read a specific article on
the menu without entering reading mode for all the selected articles on the
menu. Using the commands described below will enter reading mode for one
article only, and then return to the menu mode immediately after (depending
on the setting of the preview-continuation variable).
If there are more than 5 free lines at the bottom of the menu
screen, nn will use that space to show the article (a minimal preview
window can be permanently allocated with the window variable).
Otherwise, the screen will be cleared to show the article.
After previewing an article, it will be marked read (if the
preview-mark-read variable is set), and the following article will
become the current article.
- %x {preview}
- Preview article x.
- %% {preview}
- Preview the current article.
When the article is being shown, the following reading mode
commands are very useful:
- = {goto-menu}
- Skip the rest of the current article, and return to menu mode.
- n {next-article}
- Skip the rest of the current article, and preview the next
article.
- l {leave-article}
- Mark the article as selected (!) on the menu for handling later on.
Then skip the rest of the current article, and preview the next
article.
- %y {preview}
- Preview article y .
If the variable auto-preview-mode is set, just hitting the
article id in menu mode will enter preview mode on the specified
article.
Related variables: auto-preview-mode, min-window,
preview-continuation, preview-mark-read, window.
The following commands are used to save articles in files, unpack
archives, decode binaries, etc. It is possible to use the commands in both
reading mode to save the current article and in selection mode to save one
or more articles on the menu.
The saved articles will be appended to the specified
file(s) followed by an empty line each. Both files and directories will be
created as needed. When an article has been saved in a file, a message
reporting the number of lines saved will be shown if the save-report
variable is set (default on).
- S {save-full}
- Save articles including the full article header.
- O {save-short}
- Save articles with a short header containing only the name of the sender,
the subject, and the posting date of the article.
- E {save-header}
- Save only the header of the articles.
- W {save-body}
- Write article without a header.
- :print {print}
- Print article. Instead of a file name, this command will prompt for the
print command to which the current article will be piped. The default
print command is specified at compile time, but it can be changed by
setting the printer variable. The output will be identical to that
of the O command.
- :patch {patch}
- Send articles through patch(1) (or the program defined in the
patch-command variable). Instead of a file name, you will be
prompted for the name of a directory in which you want the patch command
to be executed. nn will then pipe the body of the article through
the patch command.
The output from the patch process will be shown on the screen and also
appended to a file named Patch.Result in the patch directory.
- :unshar {unshar}
- Unshar articles. You will be prompted for the name of a directory in which
you want nn to unshar the articles. nn will then pipe the
proper parts of the article body into a Bourne Shell whose working
directory will be set to the specified directory.
During the unpacking, the normal output from the unshar process will appear
on the screen, and the menu or article text will be redrawn when the
process is finished.
The output is also appended to a file named Unshar.Result in the
unshar directory.
The file specified in unshar-header-file (default
"Unshar.Headers") in the unshar directory will contain the
header and initial text (before the shar data) from the article. You can
use the `G' {goto-group} command to look at the Unshar.Headers
file.
- :decode {decode}
- Decode uuencoded articles into binary files. You will be prompted
for the name of a directory in which you want nn to place the
decoded binary files (the file names are taken from the uuencoded data).
nn will combine several articles into single files as needed, and
you can even decode unrelated packages (into the same directory) with one
decode command.
To be able to decode a binary file which spans several articles, nn
may have to ignore lines which fail the normal sanity checks on
uuencoded data instead of treating them as transmission errors.
Consequently, it is strongly recommended to check the resulting decoded
file using the checksum which is normally contained in the original
article. (Actually, you are also supposed to do this after decoding with a
stand-alone uudecode program).
The header and initial information in the decoded articles are saved in the
file specified in decode-header-file (default
"Decode.Headers") in the same directory as the decoded files.
If decode-skip-prefix is non-null, :decode will attempt to
ignore up to that many characters on each line to find the encoded data.
This is particularly useful in some binaries groups where files are both
uuencoded and packed with shar; nn will ignore the prefix added to
each line by shar, and thus be able to unshar, concatenate, and decode
multi-part postings automatically.
In reading mode, the following keys can also be used to invoke the
save commands:
- s
- Same as S.
- o
- Same as O.
- w
- Same as W.
- P
- Same as :print.
The save commands will prompt for a file name which is expanded
according to the rules described in the section on file name expansion
below. For each group, it is possible to specify a default save file in the
init file, either in connection with the group presentation sequence or in a
separate save-files section (see below). If a default save file is
specified for the group, nn will show this on the prompt line when it
prompts for the file name. You can edit this name as usual, but if you kill
the entire name immediately, nn will replace the default name with
the last file name you entered. If you kill this as well, nn will
leave you with a blank line.
If the quick-save variable is set, nn will only
prompt for a save file name when the current article is inside a folder;
otherwise, the default save file defined in the init file will be used
unconditionally.
If the file (and directories in the path) does not exist,
nn will ask whether the file (and the directories) should be
created.
If the file name contains an asterisk, e.g.
part*.shar
nn will save each of the articles in uniquely named files constructed by
replacing the asterisk by numbers from the sequence 1, 2, 3, etc. The format
of the string that replaces the * can be changed with the save-counter
variable, and the first number to use can be changed via
save-counter-offset.
In selection mode, nn will prompt you for the
identifier of one or more articles you want to save. When you don't want to
save more articles, just hit space. The saved articles will be marked
read.
If you enter an asterisk `*' when you are prompted for an article
to save, nn will automatically save all the selected articles
on the current menu page and mark them read.
Likewise, if you enter a plus `+', nn will save all the
selected articles on all menu pages and mark them read.
This is very useful to unpack an entire package using the
:unshar and :decode commands. It can also be used in
combination with the save selected articles feature to save a
selection of articles in separate, successively numbered files. But do not
confuse these two concepts! The S* and S+ commands can be used
to save the selected articles in a single file as well as in separate files,
and the save in separate files feature can be used also when saving
individual articles, either in the selection mode, or in the article reading
mode.
When articles are saved in a file with a full or partial header,
any header lines in the body of the article will be escaped by a
tilde (e.g. ~From: ...) to enable nn to split the folder into
separate articles. The escape string can be redefined via the
embedded-header-escape variable.
Articles can optionally be saved in MAIL or MMDF compatible format
by setting the mail-format and mmdf-format variables. These
variables only specify the format used when creating a new folder, while
appending to an existing folder will be done in the format of the folder
(unless folder-format-check is false).
Related variables: confirm-append, confirm-create,
decode-header-file, decode-skip-prefix, default-save-file, folder-save-file,
edit-patch-command, edit-print-command, edit-unshar-command, folder,
folder-format-check, mail-format, mmdf-format, patch-command, printer,
quick-save, save-counter, save-counter-offset, save-report,
suggest-default-save, unshar-command, unshar-header-file.
When more than one article is saved in a folder, nn is able
to split the folder, and each article in the folder can be treated like a
separate article.
This means that you can save, decode, reply, follow-up, etc. just
as with the original article.
You can also cancel (delete) individual articles in a
folder using the normal C {cancel} command described later.
When you quit from the folder, you will then be given the option to remove
the cancelled articles from the folder.
The original folder is saved in a file named `BackupFolder~' in
the .nn directory (see the backup-folder-path variable) by renaming
or copying the old folder as appropriate. When the folder has been
compressed, the backup folder will be removed unless the variable
keep-backup-folder is set.
If all articles in a folder are cancelled, the folder will be
removed or truncated to zero length (whatever is allowed by directory and
file permissions). In this case no backup folder is retained even when
keep-backup-folder is set!
If the variable trace-folder-packing is set, nn will
show which articles are kept and which are removed as the folder is
rewritten.
Folders are rewritten in the format of the original folder, i.e.
the mail-format and mmdf-format variables are ignored.
Related variables: backup-folder-path, keep-backup-folder,
trace-folder-packing.
When the save commands prompts for a file name, the following file
name expansions are performed on the file name you enter:
- +folder
- The + is replaced by the contents of the folder variable
(default value "~/News/") resulting in the name of a file in the
folder directory. Examples:
+emacs, +nn, +sources/shar/nn
- +
- A single plus is replaced by the expansion of the file name contained in
the default-save-file variable (or by folder-save-file when
saving from a folder).
- ~/file
- The ~ is replaced by the contents of the environment variable HOME,
i.e. the path name of your home directory. Examples:
~/News/emacs, ~/News/nn, ~/src/shar/nn
- ~user/file
- The ~user part is replaced by the user's home
directory as defined in the /etc/passwd file.
- |command-line
- Instead of writing to a file, the articles are piped to the given shell
(/bin/sh) command-line. Each save or write command will create a separate
pipe, but all articles saved or written in one command (in selection mode)
are given as input to the same shell command. Example:
| pr | lp
This will print the articles on the printer after they have been piped
through pr.
It is possible to create separate pipes for each saved article by using a
double pipe symbol in the beginning of the command, e.g.
|| cd ~/src/nn ; patch
The following symbols are expanded in a file name or command:
- $F
- will be expanded to the name of the current group with the periods
replaced by slashes, e.g. rec/music/synth.
- $G
- will be expanded to the name of the current group.
- $L
- will be expanded to the last component of the name of the current
group. You may use this to create default save file names like +src/$L in
the comp.sources groups.
- $N
- will be expanded to the (local) article number, e.g. 1099. In selection
mode it is only allowed at the end of the file name!
- $(VAR)
- is replaced by the string value of the environment variable
VAR.
Using these symbols, a simple naming scheme for `default folder
name' is +$G which will use the group name as folder name. Another
possibility is +$F/$N.
As mentioned above, you can also instruct nn to save a
series of files in separate, unique files. All that is required is that the
file name contains an asterisk, e.g.
+src/hype/part*.shar
This will cause each of the articles to be saved in separate, unique files named
part1.shar, part2.shar, and so on, always choosing a part number that results
in a unique file name (i.e. if part1.shar did already exist, the first article
would be saved in part2.shar, the next in part3.shar, and so on).
Related variables: default-save-file, folder,
folder-save-file, save-counter, save-counter-offset.
When entering a file name or a news group name, a simple
completion feature is available using the space, tab,
and ? keys.
Hitting space anywhere during input will complete the
current component of the file name or group name with the
first available possibility.
If this possibility is not the one you want, keep on hitting
space until it appears.
When the right completion has appeared, you can just continue
typing the file or group name, or you can hit tab to fix the current
component, and get the first possibility for the next component, and
then use space to go through the other possible completions.
The ? key will produce a list of the possible
completions of the current component. If the list is too long for the
available space on screen, the key can be repeated to get the next part of
the list.
The current completion can be deleted with the erase
key.
The default value for a file name is the last file name you have
entered, so if you enter a space as the first character after the
prompt, the last file name will be repeated (and you can edit it if you
like). In some cases, a string will already be written for you in the prompt
line, and to get the default value in these cases, use the kill key.
This also means that if you neither want the initial value, nor the default
value, you will have to hit the kill twice to get a clean prompt
line.
Related variables: comp1-key, comp2-key, help-key,
suggest-default-save.
In both selection mode and reading mode you can post new articles,
post follow-ups to articles, send replies to the author of an article, and
you can send mail to another user with the option of including an article in
the letter. In reading mode, a response is made to the current article,
while in selection mode you will be prompted for an article to respond
to.
The following commands are available (the lower-case equivalents
are also available in reading mode):
- R {reply}
- Reply through mail to the author of the article. This is the preferred way
to respond to an article unless you think your reply is of general
interest.
- F {follow}
- Follow-up with an article in the same newsgroup (unless an alternative
group is specified in the article header). The distribution of the
follow-up is normally the same as the original article, but this can be
modified via the follow-distribution variable.
- M {mail}
- Mail a letter or forward an article to a single recipient. In
selection mode, you will be prompted for an article to include in your
letter, and in reading mode you will be asked if the current article
should be included in the letter. You will then be prompted for the
recipient of the letter (default recipient is yourself) and the subject of
the letter (if an article is included, you may hit space to get the
default subject which is the subject of the included article).
The header of the article is only included in the posted letter if it is
forwarded (i.e. not edited), or if the variable include-full-header
is set.
- :post {post}
- Post a new article to any newsgroup. This command will prompt you for a
comma-separated list of newsgroups to post to (you cannot enter a
space because space is used for group name completion as described
below).
If you enter ? {help-key} as the first key, nn will
show you a list of all available news groups and their purpose. While
paging through this list, you can enter q to quit looking at the
list. You can also enter / followed by a regular expression
(typically a single word) which will cause nn to show a (much
shorter) list containing only the lines matching the regular expression.
Normally, you will be prompted for the distribution of the article with the
default take from default-distribution, but this can be changed via
the post-distribution variable.
Generally, nn will construct a file with a suitable header,
optionally include a copy of the article in the file with each non-empty
line prefixed by a `>' character (except in mail mode), and invoke an
editor of your choice (using the EDITOR environment variable) on this file,
positioning you on the first line of the body of the article (if it knows
the editor).
When you have completed editing the message, it will compare it to
the unedited file, and if they are identical (i.e. you did not make any
changes to the file), or it is empty, the operation is cancelled. Otherwise
you will be prompted for an action to take on the constructed article (enter
first letter followed by return, or just return to take the
default action):
a)bort c)c e)dit h)old i)spell m)ail p)ost r)eedit s)end v)iew w)rite 7)bit
Action: (post article)
You now have the opportunity to perform one of the following
actions:
a throw the response away (will ask for confirmation),
c mail a copy of a follow-up to the poster of the article,
e edit the file again,
h hold response for later completion,
i run an (interactive) spell-checker on the text,
m mail a (blind) copy to a specified recipient,
n same as abort (no don't post),
p post article (same as send),
r throw away the edited text and edit the original text,
s send the article or letter,
v view the article (through the pager),
w append it to a file (before you send it),
y confirm default answer (e.g. yes post it), or
7 strip the high-order bit from all characters in the message
If you have selected a 7-bit character set (this is determined by
the values of the charset and data-bits variables), nn
will not allow you to post an article or send a letter whose body contains
characters with the high-order bit set. It will warn you after you have
first edited the message and disable the c)c, m)ail, p)ost, s)end and y)es
actions. You can then either e)dit the message to delete those characters,
use 7)bit to strip the high-order bits, a)bort the message, or h)old it and
select an 8-bit character set from nn.
To complete an unfinished response saved by the h)old command,
simply enter any response action, e.g. R {reply}. This will
notice the unfinished response and ask you whether you want to complete it
now. Only one unfinished response can exist at a time. Notice that the $A
environment variable may no longer be valid as a path to the original
article when the response is completed.
If your message contains 8-bit characters, the charset
variable is not set to "unknown" and the message does not already
have a MIME-Version or Content-XXX header, nn
will add the following headers to your message before sending it:
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=charset
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
It must be noted that sending 8-bit characters over the current
news and mail networks is risky at best; although large parts of the network
will pass through such characters unchanged, high-order bits may
occasionally be stripped. Although the MIME standard provides solutions for
this by encoding the characters, this is not yet supported by nn.
Adding the above headers is an interim solution that is compatible with
current practice and is much better than just sending the message without
any hints about the character set used.
Related variables: append-signature-mail,
append-signature-post, charset, data-bits, default-distribution,
follow-distribution, post-distribution, edit-response-check, editor,
include-art-id, include-full-header, included-mark, mail-header,
mail-record, mail-script, mailer, mailer-pipe-input, news-header,
news-record, news-script, orig-to-include-mask, pager, query-signature,
record, response-check-pause, response-default-answer, save-counter,
save-counter-offset, save-report, spell-checker.
By default nn will present the news groups in a predefined
sequence (see the section on Presentation Sequence later on). To override
this sequence and have a look at any other group the G
{goto-group} command available in both selection and reading mode
enables you to move freely between all the newsgroups.
Furthermore, the G command enables you to open folders and
other files, to read old articles you have read before, and to grep for a
specific subject in a group.
It is important to notice that normally the goto command is
recursive, i.e. a new menu level is created when the specified group
or folder is presented, and when it has been read, nn will continue
the activity in the group that was presented before the goto command was
executed. However, if there are unread articles in the target group you can
avoid entering a new menu level by using the j reply described below.
The current menu level (i.e. number of nested goto commands) will be shown
in the prompt line as "<N>" (in reverse video).
The goto command is very powerful, but unfortunately also a little
bit tricky at first sight, because the facilities it provides depend on the
context in which the command is used.
When executed, the goto command will prompt you for the name of
the newsgroup, folder, or file to open. It will use the first letter you
enter to distinguish these three possibilities:
- return
- An empty answer is equivalent to the current newsgroup.
- letter
- The answer is taken to be the name of a newsgroup. If a news group with
the given name does not exist, nn will treat the answer as a
regular expression and locate the first group in the presentation sequence
(or among all groups) whose name matches the expression.
- +
-
The answer is taken to be the name of a folder. If only `+' is entered, it
is equivalent to the default save file for the current group.
- / or ./ or ~/
- The answer is taken to be the name of a file, either relative to the
current directory, relative to your home directory, or an absolute path
name for the file.
- %
- In reading mode, this reply corresponds to reading the current article
(and splitting it as a digest). In selection mode, it will prompt for an
article on the menu to read.
- @
- This choice is equivalent to the archive file for the current group.
- = and number
- These answers are equivalent to the same answers described below applied
to the current group (e.g. G return = and G = are
equivalent).
Specifying a folder, a file, or an article (with %) will
cause nn to treat the file like a digest and split it into separate
articles (not physically!) which are then presented on a menu in the usual
way, allowing you to read or save individual subarticles from the
folder.
When you enter a group name, nn will ask you how many
articles in the group you want to see on the menu. You can give the
following answers:
- a number N
- In this case you will get the newest N articles in the group, or if you
specified the current group (by hitting return to the group name
prompt or entering the number directly), you will get that many
extra articles included on the same menu (without creating a new
menu level).
- j
- This answer can only be given if there are unread articles in the group.
It will instruct nn to jump directly to the specified group in the
presentation sequence without creating a new menu level.
- u
- This instructs nn to present the unread articles in the
group (if there are any). If you have already read the group (in the
current invocation of nn), the u answer will instruct
nn to present the articles that were unread when you entered
nn.
- a
- This instruct nn to present all articles in the group.
- sword or =word
- This instructs nn to search all articles in the groups, but
only present the articles containing the word word in the subject.
Notice that case is ignored when searching for the word in the subject
lines.
- nword
- Same as the s form except that it searched for articles where the
sender name matches word.
- eword
- Same as the s form except that it Psearched for articles where
either the subject or the sender name matches word.
- word =
/regexp
- When the first character of the word specified with the s,
n, and e forms is a slash `/', the rest of the input is
interpreted as a regular expression to search for. Notice that regular
expression matching is case insensitive when case-fold-search is
set (default).
- return
- The meaning of an empty answer depends on the context: if there are unread
articles in the specified group the unread articles will be presented,
otherwise all articles in the group will be included in the
menu.
If you specified the current group, and the menu already contains
all the available articles, nn will directly prompt for a word to
search for in the subject of all articles (the prompt will be an equal
sign.)
When the goto command creates a new menu level, nn will not
perform auto kill or selection in the group. You can use the +
command in menu mode to perform the auto-selections.
There are three commands in the goto family:
- G {goto-group}
- This is the general goto command described above.
- B {back-group}
- Backup one or more groups. You can hit this key one or more times to go
back in the groups already presented (including those without new
articles); when you have found the group you are looking for, hit
space to enter it.
- A {advance-group}
- Advance one or more groups. This command is similar to the B
command, but operates in the opposite direction.
- N {next-group}
- When used within an A or B command, it skips forward to the
next group in the sequence with unread articles or which has previously
been visited.
- P {previous}
- When used within an A or B command, it skips backwards to
the preceding group in the sequence with unread articles or which has
previously been visited.
Once you have entered an A or Bcommand, you can
freely mix the A, B, P, and N commands to find
the group you want, and you can also use the G command to be prompted
for a group name.
To show the use of the goto command some typical examples on its
use are given below:
Present the unread articles in the dk.general group
G dk.general return u
Jump directly to the gnu.emacs group and continue from there
G gnu.emacs return j
Include the last 10 READ articles in the current group menu
G 10 return
Find all articles in rec.music.misc on the subject Floyd
G rec.music.misc return
= floyd return
Open the folder +nn
G +nn return
Split current article as a digest (in reading mode)
G %
Related variables: case-fold-search, default-save-file,
folder-save-file
When there is a subject or an author which you are either very
interested in, or find completely uninteresting, you can easily instruct
nn to auto-select or auto-kill articles with specific
subjects or from specific authors. These instructions are stored in a
kill file, and the most common types of entries can be created using
the following command:
- K {kill-select}
- Create an entry in your personal kill file. The contents of the entry is
specified during a short dialog that is described in details below. This
command is available in both selection and reading mode.
Entries in the kill file may apply to a single newsgroup or to all
newsgroups. Furthermore, entries may be permanent or they may be expired a
given number of days after their entry.
To increase performance, nn uses a compiled version of the
kill file which is read in when nn is invoked. The compiled kill file
will automatically be updated if the normal kill file has been modified.
The following dialog is used to build the kill file entry:
- AUTO (k)ill or (s)elect (CR
=> Kill subject 30 days)
- If you simply want nn to kill all articles with the subject of the
current article (in reading mode) or a specific article (which nn
will prompt for in selection mode), just hit return. This will
cause nn to create an entry in the kill file to kill the current
(or specified) subject in the current group for a period of 30 days (which
should be enough for the discussion to die out).
You can control the default kill period, or change it into a
"select" period via the default-kill-select
variable.
If this "default behaviour" is not what you want,
just answer either k or s to kill or select articles,
respectively, which will bring you on to the rest of the questions.
- AUTO SELECT on
(s)ubject or (n)ame (s)
- (The SELECT will be substituted with KILL depending on the
previous answer). Here you specify whether you want the kill or select to
depend on the subject of the article (s or space), or on the
name of the author (n).
- SELECT
NAME:
- (Again SELECT may be substituted with KILL and
SUBJECT may replace NAME). You must now enter a name (or
subject) to select (or kill). In reading mode, you may just hit
return (or %) to use the name (or subject) of the current
article. In selection mode, you can use the name (or subject) from an
article on the menu by answering with % followed by the
corresponding article identifier.
When the name or subject is taken from an article (the current
or one from the menu), nn will only select or kill articles where
the name or subject matches the original name or subject exactly
including case.
If the first character typed at the prompt is a slash `/', the
rest of the line is used as a regular expression which is used to
match the name or subject (case insensitive).
Otherwise, nn will select or kill articles which
contain the specified string anywhere in the name or subject
(ignoring case).
- SELECT in (g)roup
`dk.general' or in (a)ll groups (g)
- You must now specify whether the selection or kill should apply to the
current group only (g or space) or to all groups
(a).
- Lifetime of entry
in days (p)ermanent (30)
- You can now specify the lifetime of the entry, either by entering a number
specifying the number of days the entry should be active, or p to
specify the entry as a permanent entry. An empty reply is equivalent to 30
days.
- CONFIRM SELECT
....
- Finally, you will be asked to confirm the entry, and you should especially
note the presence or absence of the word exact which specify
whether an exact match applies for the entry.
Related variables: default-kill-select, kill.
The kill file consists of one line for each entry. Empty lines and
lines starting with a # character are ignored. nn automatically
places a # character in the first position of expired entries when it
compiles the kill file. You can then edit the kill file manually from time
to time to clean out these entries.
Each line has the following format
[expire time :] [group name] : flags : string [: string]...
Permanent entries have no expire time (in which case the
colon is omitted as well!). Otherwise, the expire time defines the
time (as a time_t value) when the entry should be expired.
The group name field can have three forms:
- news.group.name
- If it is the name of a single news group (e.g. comp.unix), the entry
applies to that group only.
- /regular expression
- If it starts with a slash `/' followed by a regular expression
(e.g. /^news\..*), the entry applies to all groups whose name are matched
by the regular expression.
- empty
- An empty group field will apply the entry to all groups.
The flags field consists of a list of characters which
identifies the type of entry, and the interpretation of each string
field. When used, the flag characters must be used in the order in which
they are described below:
- ~ (optional)
-
When this flag is present on any of the entries for a specific group, it
causes all entires which are not auto-selected to be killed. This
is a simple way to say: I'm interested in this and that, but nothing
else.
- + or ! (optional)
-
Specify an auto-select + or an auto-kill ! entry,
respectively. If neither are used, the article is neither selected nor
killed which is useful in combination with the `~' flag.
- > (optional)
- When used with a subject (flag s), the kill entry only matches
follow-ups to that subject (i.e. where the Subject: line starts with Re:).
For example, to kill all "Re:"'s in rec.humor use the following
kill entry: rec.humor:!>s/:.
- < (optional)
- When used with a subject (flag s), the kill entry only matches base
articles with that subject (i.e. where the Subject: line does not start
with Re:). For example, to kill all articles asking for help (but not
follow-ups) in the tex group, add this to your kill file:
comp.text.tex:!s</:^HELP
- n or s or a (mandatory)
-
Specify whether the corresponding string applies to the name n or to
the subject s of an article. If flag a is used, the
corresponding string is ignored (but must be present), and the entry
applies to articles with a non-empty References: line.
- / (optional)
-
Specifies that the corresponding string is a regular
expression which the sender or subject is matched against. If not
specified, a simple string match is performed using the given
string.
- = (optional)
-
Specifies that the match against the name or subject is case
sensitive. Furthermore, when regular expression matching is
not used, the name or subject must be of the same length of the
string to match. Otherwise, the match will be case insensitive, and
a string may occur anywhere in the name or subject to match.
- | or & (mandatory if multiple strings)
-
If more than one string is specified, the set of flags corresponding
to each string must be separated by either an or operator
`|' or an and operator `&'. The and operator has
a higher precedence than the or operator, e.g. a complex match expression
a|b&c|d will succeed if either of a, b&c, or
d matches.
The string field in the entry is the name, subject or
regular expression that will be matched against the name or subject of each
article in the group (or all groups). Colons and backslashes must be escaped
with a backslash in the string.
Example 1: Auto-select articles from `Tom Collins' (exact) on
subject `News' in all groups:
:+n=&s:Tom Collins:News
Example 2: Kill all articles which are neither from `Tom' or `Eve'
in some.group. Select only articles from Eve:
some.group:~n:Tom
some.group:+n:Eve
The second example can also be written as a single entry with an
or operator (in this case, the select/kill attribute only applies to the
succeeding strings):
some.group:~n|+n:Tom:Eve
To remove expired entries, to "undo" a K command,
and to make the more advanced entries with more than one string, you will
have to edit the kill file manually. To recompile the file, you can use the
:compile command. When you invoke nn, it will also recompile
the kill file if the compiled version is out of date.
The ! commands available in selection and reading mode are
identical in operation (with one exception). When you enter the shell escape
command, you will be prompted for a shell command. This command will be fed
to the shell specified in the shell variable (default loaded from the
SHELL environment variable or /bin/sh) after the following substitutions
have been performed on the command:
- File name
expansion
- The earlier described file name expansions will be performed on all
arguments.
- $G
- will be substituted with the name of the current news group.
- $L
- will be substituted with the last component of the name of the
current news group.
- $F
- will be substituted with the name of the current news group with the
periods replaced by slashes.
- $N
- will be substituted with the (local) article number (only defined in
reading mode).
- $A
- is replaced by the full path name of the file containing the current
article (only defined in reading mode).
- %
- Same as $A.
- $(VAR)
- is replaced by the string value of the environment variable
VAR.
When the shell command is completed, you will be asked to hit any
key to continue. If you hit the ! key again, you will be prompted for
a new shell command. Any other key will redraw the screen and return you to
the mode you came from.
Related variables: shell, shell-restrictions.
Below are more useful commands which are available in both
selection and reading modes.
- U {unsub}
- Unsubscribe to the current group. You will not see this group any more
unless you explicitly request it. If the variable
unsubscribe-mark-read is set, all articles in the group will be
marked read when you unsubscribe.
If the variable keep-unsubscribed is not set, the group will be
removed from .newsrc. If you are not subscribing to the group, you will be
given the possibility to resubscribe to the group! This may be used
in connection with the G command to resubscribe a group.
- C {cancel}
- Cancel (delete) an article in the current group or folder. Cancelling
articles in a folder will cause the folder to be rewritten when it is
closed. In selection mode, you will be prompted for the identifier of the
article to cancel. Normal users can only cancel their own articles. See
also the section on folder maintenance.
- Y {overview}
- Provide an overview of the groups with unread articles.
- " {layout}
- Change menu layout in selection mode. The menu will be redrawn using the
next layout (cycling through ..., 2, 3, 4, 0, 1, ...)
Most of the commands in nn are bound to a key and can be
activated by a single keystroke. However, there are a few commands that
cannot be bound to a key directly.
As shown in the keystroke command descriptions, all commands have
a name, and it is possible to activate a command by name with the
extended command key (:). Hitting this key will prompt you for
the name of a command (and parameters). For example, an alternative to
hitting the R key to reply to an article is to enter the extended
command :reply followed by return. The :post and
:unshar commands described earlier can also be bound to a key. The
complete list of commands which can be bound to keys is provided in the
section on Key Mappings below.
The following extended commands cannot be bound to a key,
mainly because they require additional parameters on the prompt line, or
because it should not be possible to activate them too easily.
- :admin
- Enter administrative mode. This is identical in operation to the
nnadmin(1M) program.
- :bug
- Prepare and send a bug report to the nn-bugs mailing address.
- :cd [ directory ]
- Change current working directory. If the directory argument is not
provided, nn will prompt for it.
- :clear
- Clear the screen (without redraw). This may be useful at the beginning of
the init file (possibly guarded by "on program nn"), or in some
macros.
- :compile
- Recompile the kill file. This is not necessary under normal
operation since nn automatically compiles the file on start-up if
it has changed, but it can be used if you modify the kill file while
nn is suspended.
- :coredump
- Abort with a core dump. For debugging purposes only.
- :define macro
- Define macro number macro as described in the Macro Definition
section below. If macro is omitted, the next free macro number will
be chosen.
- :dump table
- Same as the :show command described below.
- :help [ subject ]
- Provide online help on the specified subject. If you omit the subject, a
list of the available topics will be given.
- :load [ file ]
- Load the specified file. If the file argument is omitted,
the init file is reloaded. The sequence part (if present) is
ignored.
- :local variable [ value ]
- Make the variable local to the current group. Subsequent changes to the
variable will only be effective until the current group is left. If a
value is specified, it will be assigned to the local variable. To assign a
new value to a boolean variable, the values on and off must
be used.
- :lock variable
- Lock the specified variable so it cannot be modified.
- :man
- Call up the online manual. The manual is presented as a normal folder with
the program name in the `From' field and the section title in the
`subject' field. All the normal commands related to a folder works for the
online manual as well, e.g. you can save and print sections of the
manual.
- :map arguments
- This is the command used for binding commands to the keys. It is fully
described in the Key Mapping section below.
- :mkdir [ directory ]
- Create the directory (and the directories in its path). It will prompt for
at directory name if the argument is omitted.
- :motd
- Show the message of the day (maintained by the news administrator
in the file "motd" in the lib directory. This file is
automatically displayed on start-up whenever it changes if the motd
variable is set.
- :pwd
- Print path name of current working directory on message line.
- :q
- Has no effect besides redrawing the screen if necessary. If an extended
command (one which is prefixed by a :) produces any output requiring the
screen to be redrawn, the screen will not be redrawn immediately if the
variable delay-redraw is set (useful on slow terminals). Instead
another : prompt is shown to allow you to enter a new extended
command immediately. It is sufficient to hit return to redraw the
screen, but it has been my experience that entering q return in
this situation happens quite often, so it was made a no-op.
- :q!
- Quit nn without updating the .newsrc file.
- :Q
- Quit nn. This is equivalent to the normal Q command.
- :rmail
- Open your mailbox (see the mail variable) as a folder to read the
incoming messages. This is not a full mail interface (depending on
the nn configuration, you may not be able to delete messages, add cc: on
replies, etc), but it can give you a quick glance at new mail without
leaving nn.
- :set variable [ value ]
- Set a boolean variable to true or assign the value to a string or integer
variable. The :set command is described in details in the section
on VARIABLES.
- :sh
- Suspend nn, or if that is not possible, spawn an interactive
shell.
- :show groups mode
- Show the total number or the number of unread articles in the current
group, depending on mode: all (list the number of unread
articles in all groups including groups which you have unsubscribed to),
total (list the total number of articles in all existing groups),
sequence (list unread groups in presentation sequence order),
subscr (list all subscribed groups), unsub (list
unsubscribed groups only). Any other mode results in a listing of
the number of unread articles in all subscribed groups including those you
have suppressed with the `!' symbol in the group presentation sequence. To
get just the currently unread groups in the presentation sequence, use the
`Y' {overview} command.
- :show kill
- Show the kill entries that applies to the current group and to all
groups.
- :show rc [ group ]
- Show the .newsrc and select file entries for the current or the specified
group.
- :show map [ mode ]
- Show the key bindings in the current or specified mode.
- :sort [ mode ]
- Reorder the articles on the menu according to mode or if omitted to
the default sort-mode. The following sorting modes are available:
arrival: list articles by local article number which will be the same
as the order in which they arrived on the system (unless groups are
merged),
subject: articles with identical subjects are grouped and ordered
after age of the oldest article in the group,
lexical: subjects in lexicographical order,
age: articles ordered after posting date only,
sender: articles ordered after sender's name.
- :toggle variable
- Toggle a boolean variable.
- :unread [ group ] [ articles ]
- Mark the current (or specified) group as unread. If the articles
argument is omitted, the number of unread articles in the group will be
set to the number of unread articles when nn was invoked.
Otherwise, the argument specifies the number of unread articles.
- :unset variable
- Set a boolean variable to false or clear an integer variable.
- :x
- Quit nn and mark all articles in the current group as
read!
Related variables: backup, bug-report-address,
delay-redraw, keep-unsubscribed, unsubscribe-mark-read, mail, pager,
sort-mode.
If you have not read news for some time, there are probably more
news than you can cope with. Using the option -a0 nn will put
you into catch-up mode.
The first question you will get is whether to catch up
interactively or automatically. If you instruct nn to catch up
automatically, it will simply mark all articles in all groups as read, thus
bringing you completely up-to-date.
If you choose the interactive mode, nn will locate all
groups with unread articles, and for each group it will prompt you for an
action to take on the group. An action is selected using a single letter
followed by return. The following actions are available:
- y
- Mark all articles as read in current group.
- n
- Do not update group (this is the default action if you just hit
return).
- r
- Enter reading mode to read the group.
- U
- Unsubscribe to the group.
- ?
- Give a list of actions.
- q
- Quit. When you quit, nn will ask whether the rest of the groups
should be updated unconditionally or whether they should remain
unread.
It is possible to control the behaviour of nn through the
setting (and unsetting) of the variables described below. There are several
ways of setting variables:
- Through command line options when nn is invoked.
- Through assignments on the command line when nn is invoked.
- Through global set commands in the init file.
- Through set or local commands executed from entry macros.
- Through the :set extended command when you run nn.
There are four types of variables:
- Boolean variables
- Integer variables
- String variables
- Key variables
Boolean variables control a specific function in nn, e.g.
whether the current time is shown in the prompt line. A boolean variable is
set to true with the command
set variable
and it is set to false with either of the following (equivalent)
commands:
unset variable
set novariable
You can also toggle the value of a boolean variable using the
command:
toggle variable
For example:
set time
unset time
set notime
toggle time
Integer variables control an amount e.g. the size of the preview
window, or the maximum number of articles to read in each group. They are
set with the following command:
set variable value
In some cases, not setting an integer value has a special meaning, for example,
not having a minimal preview window or reading all articles in the groups no
matter how many there are. The special meaning can be re-established by the
following command:
unset variable
For example:
set window 7
unset limit
String variables may specify directory names, default values for
prompts, etc. They are set using the command
set variable string
Normally, the string value assigned to the variable value starts
at the first non-blank character after the variable name and ends with the
last non-blank character (excluding comments) on the line. To include leading
or trailing blanks, or the comment start symbol, #, in the string they must be
escaped using a backslash `\', e.g. to set included-mark to the string
" # ", the following assignment can be used:
set included-mark \ \#\ # blank-#-blank
To include a backslash in the string, it must be duplicated `\\'.
A backslash may also be used to include the following special characters in
the string: \a=alarm, \b=backspace, \e=escape, \f=form-feed, \n=new-line,
\r=return, \t=tab.
Key variables control the keys used to control special functions
during user input such as line editing and completion. They are set using
the command
set variable key-name
A variable can be locked which makes further modification
of the variable impossible:
lock variable
This can be used in the setup init file which is loaded unconditionally
to enforce local conventions or restrictions. For example, to fix the
included-mark variable to the string ">", the following
commands can be placed in the setup file:
set included-mark >
lock included-mark
Some variables only make sense when set on the command line, since they are
examined early in startup, before the init files are read. The syntax for
setting variables on the command line is:
variable=value
The value may need to be quoted if it contains white space or special
characters. They can be intermixed with other options, and are examined prior
to other argument parsing.
The current variable settings can be shown with the :set
command:
- :set (without arguments)
- This will give a listing of the variables which have been set in either
the init file or interactively.
- :set all
- This will give a listing of all variables. Modified variables will be
marked with a `*' and local variables will be marked with a `>'.
A locked variable is marked with a `!'.
- :set /regexp
- This will give a listing of all variables whose name matches the given
regular expression.
- :set partial-name space
- The space (comp1-key) key will complete the variable name as
usual, but as a side effect it will display the variable's current value
in the message line.
Variables are global by default, but a local instantiation of the
variable can be created using the :local command. The local variable
will overlay the global variable as long as the current group is active,
i.e. the global variable will be used again when you exit the current group.
The initial value of the local variable will be the same as the global
variable, unless a new value is specified in the :local command:
:local variable [ value ]
The following variables are available:
- also-full-digest (boolean,
default false)
- When a digest is split, the digest itself is not normally included on the
menu, and as such the initial administrative information is not available.
Setting also-full-digest will cause the (unsplit) digest to be
included on the menu. These articles are marked with a @ at the beginning
of the subject.
- also-subgroups (boolean,
default true)
- When set, a group name in the presentation sequence will also cause all
the subgroups of the group to be included, for example, comp.unix will
also include comp.unix.questions, etc. When also-subgroups is not
set, subgroups are only included if the group name is followed by a `.' in
which case the main group is not included, i.e. `comp.unix' is not
included when `comp.unix.' is specified in the presentation sequence, and
vice-versa. Following a group name by an asterisk `*', e.g. comp.unix*,
will include the group as well as all subgroups independently of the
setting of also-subgroups.
- append-signature-mail (boolean,
default false)
- When false, it is assumed that the .signature file is automatically
appended to responses sent via E-mail. If true, .signature will be
appended to the letter (see query-signature).
- append-signature-post (boolean,
default false)
- When false, it is assumed that the .signature file is automatically
appended to posted articles. If true, .signature will explicitly be
appended to posted articles (see query-signature).
- attributes
symbols (string, default ....)
- Each element in this string represents a symbol used to represent an
article attribute when displayed on the screen. See the section on Marking
Articles and Attributes.
- auto-junk-seen (boolean,
default true)
- When set, articles which have the seen attribute (,) will be marked
read when the current group is left. If not set, these articles will still
be either unread or marked seen the next time the group is entered (see
also confirm-junk-seen and retain-seen-status).
- auto-preview-mode (boolean,
default false)
- Enables Auto Preview Mode. In this mode, selecting an article on
the menu using its article id (letter a-z) will enter preview mode on that
article immediately. Furthermore, the `n' {next-article} command
will preview the next article on the menu only if it has the same subject
as the current article; otherwise, it will return to the menu with the
cursor placed on the next article. The continue command at the end
of the article and the `=' {goto-menu} returns to the menu
immediately as usual.
- auto-read-mode-limit
N (integer, default 0)
- When operating in auto reading mode, nn will
auto-select all unread articles in the group, skip the article
selection phase, and enter reading mode directly after entry to the group.
Auto reading mode is disabled when auto-read-mode-limit is zero; it
is activated unconditionally if the value is negative, and conditionally
if the value is greater than zero and the number of unread articles in the
current group does not exceed the given value.
- auto-select-closed
mode (integer, default 1)
- Normally, selecting a closed subject (usually in consolidated menu
mode) will select (or deselect) all unread articles with the given
subject (or all articles if they are all read). This behaviour can be
changed via the value of this variable as follows:
0: select only the first article with the subject (shown on menu).
1: select only the unread articles with the subject.
2: select all available articles with the subject.
- auto-select-rw (boolean,
default false)
- If set, a subject of an article read or posted is automatically used for
subsequent auto-selecting (if not already selected). This is the most
efficient way to see your own posts automatically.
- auto-select-subject (boolean,
default false)
- When set, selecting an article from the menu using the article id (a-z),
all articles on the menu with the same subject will automatically be
selected as well.
- backup (boolean,
default true)
- When set, a copy of the initial .newsrc and select files will save be the
first time they are changed. nn remembers the initial contents of
these files internally, so the backup variable can be set any time if not
set on start-up.
- backup-folder-path
file (string, default "BackupFolder~")
- When removing deleted articles from a folder, this variable defines the
name of the file where a (temporary) copy of the original folder is saved.
If the file name doesn't contain a `/', the file will be located in
the .nn directory. Otherwise the file name is used directly as the
relative or full path name of the backup file. If possible, the old folder
will be renamed to the backup folder name; otherwise the old folder is
copied to the backup folder.
- backup-suffix
suffix (string, default ".bak")
- The suffix appended to file names to make the corresponding backup file
name (see backup).
- bug-report-address
address (string, default mtpins@nndev.org)
- The mail address to which bug reports created with the :bug command
are sent.
- case-fold-search (boolean,
default true)
- When set, string and regular expression matching will be case independent.
This is related to all commands matching on names or subjects, except in
connection with auto-kill and auto-select where the individual kill file
entries specifies this property.
- charset
charset (string, default "us-ascii")
- The character set in use on your terminal. Legal values are
"us-ascii", "iso-8859-X", where X is a
nonzero digit, and "unknown". Setting this variable also sets
the data-bits variable to the default bit width of the character
set (7 for "us-ascii" and "unknown", 8 for the
"iso-8859-X" sets).
The value of this variable also determines whether nn
allows 8-bit characters in the body of articles being posted and letters
being mailed (unless the value is "unknown", in which case
this is determined by the value of the data-bits variable). If
necessary, nn will add extra headers to the message indicating
its the character set.
- check-group-access (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will perform a check on the readability of a group's
readability before showing the menu for that group. Normally, this is not
necessary since all users traditionally have access to all news groups.
Setting (and locking) this variable may be used to limit access to a news
group via the permissions and ownership of the group's spool directory
(this will only work for non-NNTP sites).
- collapse-subject
offset (integer, default 25)
- When set (non-negative), subject lines which are too long to be presented
in full on the menus will be "collapsed" by removing a
sufficient number of characters from the subject starting at the given
offset in the subject. This is useful in source groups where the
"Part (01/10)" string sometimes disappears from the menu. When
not set (or negative), the subjects are truncated.
- columns
col (integer, default screen width)
- This variable contains the screen width i.e. character positions per
line.
- comp1-key
key (key, default space)
- The key which gives the first/next completion, and the default value when
nn is prompting for a string, e.g. a file name.
- comp2-key
key (key, default tab)
- The key which ends the current completion and gives the first completion
for the next component when nn is prompting for a string, e.g. a
file name.
- compress (boolean,
default false)
- This variable controls whether text compression (see the compress
command) is turned on or off when an article is shown. The compression is
still toggled for the current article with the compress command
key.
- confirm-append (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will ask for confirmation before appending an article
to an existing file (see also confirm-create).
- confirm-auto-quit (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will ask for confirmation before quitting after having
read the last group. If not confirmed, nn will recycle the
presentation sequence looking for groups that were skipped with the `N'
{next-group} command. But it will not look for new articles arrived
since the invocation of nn.
- confirm-create (boolean,
default true)
- When set, nn will ask for confirmation before creating a new file
or directory when saving or unpacking an article (see also
confirm-append).
- confirm-entry (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will ask for confirmation before entering a group with
more than confirm-entry-limit unread articles (on the first menu
level). It is useful on slow terminals if you don't want to wait until
nn has drawn the first menu to be able to skip the group.
Answering no to the "Enter?" prompt will cause nn to skip
to the next group without marking the current group as read. If you answer
by hitting interrupt, nn will ask the question "Mark as
read?" which allows you to mark the current group as read before
going to the next group. If this second question is also answered by
hitting interrupt, nn will quit immediately.
- confirm-entry-limit
articles (integer, default 0)
- Specifies the minimum number of unread articles in a group for which the
confirm-entry functionality is activated.
- confirm-junk-seen (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will require confirmation before marking seen articles
as read when auto-junk-seen is set.
- confirm-messages (boolean,
default false)
- In some cases, nn will sleep one second (or more) when it has shown
a message to the user, e.g. in connection with macro debugging. Setting
confirm-messages will cause nn to wait for you to
confirm all messages by hitting any key. (It will show the symbol <>
to indicate that it is awaiting confirmation.)
- consolidated-manual (boolean,
default false)
- When set, the online manual will be presented with one menu line
for each program in the nn package.
- When set, nn will automatically close all multi-article
subjects on entry to a group, so that each subject only occur once on the
menu page.
- counter-delim-left (string,
default "[")
- The delimiter string output to the left of the article counter in a closed
subject's menu line.
- counter-delim-right (string,
default "] ")
- The delimiter string output to the right of the article counter in a
closed subject's menu line.
- counter-padding
pad (integer, default 5)
- On a consolidated menu, the subjects may not be very well aligned because
the added [...] counters have varying length. To (partially) remedy this,
all counters (and subjects without counters) are prefixed by up to
pad spaces to get better alignment. Increasing it further may yield
practically perfect alignment at the cost of less space for the subject
itself.
- cross-filter-seq (boolean,
default true)
- When set, cross posted articles will be presented in the first possible
group, i.e. according to the current presentation sequence
(cross-post filtering on sequence). The article is
automatically marked read in the other cross posted groups unless you
unsubscribe to the first group in which it was shown before reading the
other groups. Likewise, it is sufficient to leave the article unread in
the first group to keep it for later handling.
If not set, cross-postings are shown in the first group occurring on the
Newsgroups: line which the user subscribes to (i.e. you let the poster
decide which group is most appropriate to read his posting).
- cross-post (boolean,
default false)
- Normally, nn will only show cross-posted articles in the first
subscribed group on the Newsgroups: line. When cross-post is set,
nn will show cross-posted articles in all subscribed groups to
which they are posted.
- cross-post-limit
N (integer, default 0)
- If this variable is set to a value other than 0, then any articles posted
to more than N newsgroups are automatically skipped. A value of 5
is pretty good for discarding ``spam'' articles.
- data-bits
bits (integer, default 7)
- When set to 7, nn will display characters with the 8th bit set
using a meta-notation M-7bit-char. If set to 8, these
characters are sent directly to the screen (unless monitor is set).
Setting the charset variable also sets this variable to the default
bit width of character set.
It also controls whether keyboard input is 7 or 8 bits, and
thus whether key maps contain 127 or 255 entries. See the key mapping
section for more details.
If the charset has value "unknown", the value
of data-bits also determines whether nn allows 8-bit
characters in the body of articles being posted and letters being mailed
(this is normally determined directly by the charset
variable).
- date (boolean, default
true)
- If set nn will show the article posting date when articles are
read.
- debug
mask (integer, default 0)
- Look in the source if you are going to use this.
- The name of the file in which the header and initial text of articles
decoded with the :decode command is saved. Unless the file name
starts with a `/', the file will be created in the same directory as the
decoded files. The information is not saved if this variable is not
set.
- decode-skip-prefix
N (integer, default 2)
- When non-null, the :decode command will automatically skip up
to N characters at the beginning of each line to find valid
uuencoded data. This allows nn to automatically decode (multi-part)
postings which are both uuencoded and packed with shar.
- default-distribution
distr (string, default "world")
- The distribution to use as the default suggestion when posting articles
using the follow and post commands if the corresponding
follow-distribution or post-distribution variable contains
the default option.
- default-kill-select
[1]days (number, default 30)
- Specifies the default action for the K {kill-select} command
if the first prompt is answered by return. It contains the number
of days to keep the kill or select entry in the kill file (1-99 days). If
it has the value days+100 (e.g. 130), it denotes that the default
action is to select rather than kill on the subject for the
specified period.
- default-save-file
file (string, default +$F)
- The default save file used when saving articles in news groups where no
save file has been specified in the init file (either in a
save-files section or in the presentation sequence). It can also be
specified using the abbreviation "+" as the file name when
prompted for a file name even in groups with their own save file.
- delay-redraw (boolean,
default false)
- Normally, nn will redraw the screen after extended commands (:cmd)
that clear the screen. When delay-redraw is set nn will
prompt for another extended command instead of redrawing the screen (hit
return to redraw).
- echo-prefix-key (boolean,
default true)
- When true, hitting a prefix key (see the section on key mapping below)
will cause the prefix key to be echoed in the message line to indicate
that another key is expected.
- edit-patch-command (boolean,
default true)
- When true, the :patch command will show the current
patch-command and give you a chance to edit it before applying it
to the articles.
- edit-print-command (boolean,
default true)
- When true, the print command will show the current printer
command and give you a chance to edit it before printing the articles.
Otherwise the articles are just printed using the current printer
command.
- edit-response-check (boolean,
default true)
- When editing a response to an article, it normally does not have any
meaning to send the initial file prepared by nn unaltered, since it
is either empty or only contains included material. When this variable is
set, exiting the editor without having changed the file will automatically
abort the response action without confirmation.
- edit-unshar-command (boolean,
default false)
- When true, the :unshar command will show the current
unshar-command and give you a chance to edit it before applying it
to the articles.
- editor
command (string, default not set)
- When set, it will override the current EDITOR environment variable when
editing responses and new articles.
- When saving an article to a file, header lines embedded in the body of the
article are escaped using this string to make it possible for nn to
split the folder correctly afterwards. Header lines are not escaped if
this variable is not set.
- enter-last-read-mode
mode (integer, default 1)
- Normally, nn will remember which group is active when you quit, and
offer to jump directly to this group when you start nn the next
time. This variable is used to control this behaviour. The following
mode values are recognized:
0: Ignore the remembered group (r.g.).
1: Enter r.g. if the group is unread (with user confirmation)
2: Enter r.g. or first unread group after it in the sequence (w/conf).
3: Enter r.g. if the group is unread (no confirmation)
4: Enter r.g. or first unread group after it in the sequence (no conf).
- entry-report-limit
articles (integer, default 300)
- Normally, nn will just move the cursor to the upper left corner of
the screen while it is reading articles from the database on entry to a
group. For large groups this may take more than a fraction of a second,
and nn can then report what it is doing. If it must read more
articles than the number specified by this variable, nn will report
which group and how many articles it is reading.
- erase-key
key (key, default tty erase key)
- The key which erases the last input character when nn is prompting
for a string, e.g. a file name.
- expert (boolean,
default false)
- If set nn will use slightly shorter prompts (e.g. not tell you that
? will give you help), and be a bit less verbose in a few other cases
(e.g. not remind you that posted articles are not available
instantly).
- expired-message-delay
pause (integer, default 1)
- If a selected article is found to have been expired, nn will
normally give a message about this and sleep for a number of seconds
specified by this variable. Setting this variable to zero will still make
nn give the message without sleeping afterwards. Setting it to -1
will cause the message not to be shown at all.
- flow-control (boolean,
default true)
- When set, nn will turn on xon/xoff flow-control before writing
large amounts of text to the screen. This should guard against lossage of
output, but in some network configurations it has had the opposite effect,
losing several lines of the output. This variable is always true on
systems with CBREAK capabilities which can do single character reads
without disabling flow control.
- flush-typeahead (boolean,
default false)
- When true, nn will flush typeahead prior to reading commands from
the keyboard. It will not flush typeahead while reading parameters for a
command, e.g. file names etc.
- folder
directory (string, default ~/News)
- The full pathname of the folder directory which will replace the +
in folder names. It will be initialized from the FOLDER environment
variable if it is not set in the init file.
- folder-format-check (boolean,
default true)
- When saving an article with a full or partial header in an existing
folder, nn will check the format of the folder to be able to append
the article in the proper format. If this variable is not set, folders are
assumed to be in the format specified via the mmdf-format and
mail-format variables, and articles are saved in that format
without checking. Otherwise, the *-format variables are only used
to determine the format for new folders.
- folder-save-file
file (string, default not set)
- The default save file used when saving articles from a folder.
- follow-distribution
words (string, default see below)
- This variable controls how the Distribution: header is constructed for a
follow-up to an original article. Its value is a list of words
selected from the following list:
[ [ always ] same ] [ ask ] [
default | distribution ]
This is interpreted in two steps:
- First the default distribution is determined. If same is
specified and the original article has a Distribution: header, that
header is used. Else if default is specified (or
distribution is omitted), the value of
default-distribution is used. And finally, if only a
distribution (any word) is specified that is used as the default.
- Then if ask is specified, the user will be asked to confirm the
default distribution or provide another distribution. However, if
always (and same) is specified, and the default was taken
from the original article's distribution, the original distribution is
used without confirmation.
The default value of follow-distribution is always
same default, i.e. use either the original distribution or
the default-distribution without confirmation in either case.
- from-line-parsing
strictness (integer, default 2)
- Specifies how strict nn must parse a "From " line in a
folder to recognize it as a mail format message separator line. The
following strictness values determine whether a line starting with
"From " will be recognized as a separator line:
0: Always.
1: Line must have at least 8 fields.
2: Line must contain a valid date and time (ctime style).
- fsort (boolean,
default true)
- When set, folders are sorted alphabetically according to the subject (and
age). Otherwise, the articles in a folder will be presented in the
sequence in which they were saved.
- guard-double-slash (boolean,
default false)
- Normally, when entering a file name, entering two slashes `//' in a row
(or following a slash by a plus `/+') will cause nn to erase the
entire line and replace it with the `/' (or `+'). On some systems, two
slashes are used in network file names, and on those systems
guard-double-slash can be set; that will cause nn to require
three slashes in a row to clear the input.
- When set, it determines the list of header fields that are shown when an
article is read instead of the normal one line header showing the author
and subject. See the full description in the section on Customized Article
Headers below.
- help-key
key (key, default ?)
- The key which ends the current completion and gives a list of possible
completions for the next component when nn is prompting for a
string, e.g. a file name.
- ignore-re (boolean,
default false)
- If set, articles with subjects already seen in a previous invocation of nn
or another newsreader - and not auto-selected - are automatically killed.
A great way to read even less news!
- ignore-xon-xoff (boolean,
default false)
- Normally, nn will ignore ^S and ^Q in the input from the terminal
(if they are not handled in the tty driver). Setting this variable will
treat these characters as normal input.
- include-art-id (boolean,
default false)
- The first line in a response with included material normally reads
"...somebody... writes:" without a reference to the specific
article from which the quotation was taken (this is found in the
References: line). When this variable is set, the line will also include
the article id of the referenced article: "In ...article... ...
writes:".
- When set, the mail (M) command will always include the full header
of the original article. If it is not set, it only includes the header
when the article is forwarded without being edited.
- include-mark-blank-lines (boolean,
default false)
- When set, the included-mark is placed on blank lines in included
articles. Otherwise, blank lines are left blank (to make it easy to delete
whole paragraphs with `d}' in vi and `C-@ M-] C-W' in emacs).
- included-mark
string (string, default ">")
- This string is prefixed to all lines in the original article that are
included in a reply or a follow-up. (Now you have the possibility to
change it, but please don't. Lines with a mixture of prefixes like
: orig-> <> } ] #- etc.
are very difficult to comprehend. Let's all use the standard folks! (And
hack inews if it is the 50% rule that bothers you.)
- inews
shell-command (string, default "INEWS_PATH -h")
- The program which is invoked by nn to deliver an article to the
news transport. The program will be given a complete article including a
header containing the newsgroups to which the article is to be posted. See
also inews-pipe-input. It is not used when cancelling an
article!
- inews-pipe-input (boolean,
default true)
- When set, the article to be posted will be piped into the inews
program. Otherwise, the file containing the article will be given as the
first (and only) argument to the inews command.
- initial-newsrc-file
file (string, default '.defaultnewsrc')
- Defines the name of a file which is used as the initial .newsrc file for
new users. The name may be a full path name, or as the default a file name
which will be looked for in a number of places: in the standard news lib
directory (where it can be shared with other news readers), in nn's lib
directory, and in the database directory. Groups which are not present in
the initial .newsrc file will be automatically unsubscribed provided
new-group-action is set to a value allowing unsubscribed groups to
be omitted from .newsrc.
- keep-backup-folder (boolean,
default false)
- When set, the backup folder (see backup-folder-path) created when
removing deleted articles from a folder is not removed. Notice that a
backup folder is not created if all articles are removed from a
folder!
- keep-unsubscribed (boolean,
default true)
- When set, unsubscribed groups are kept in .newsrc. If not set, nn
will automatically remove all unsubscribed from .newsrc if
tidy-newsrc is set. See also unsubscribe-mark-read.
- kill (boolean, default true)
- If set, nn performs automatic kill and selection based on the
kill file.
- kill-debug (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will display a trace of the auto-kill/select process
on entry to a group. It is automatically turned off if `q' is entered as
the answer to a "hit any key" prompt during the debug
output.
- kill-key
key (key, default tty kill key)
- The key which deletes the current line when nn is prompting for a
string, e.g. a file name.
- kill-reference-count
N (integer, default 0)
- When this variable is non-zero, all articles which have N or more
references on the References: line (corresponding to the number of
>>'s on the menu line) will be auto-killed if they are not
auto-selected (or preserved) via an entry in the kill file. It should
probably not be used globally for all groups, but can be set on a
per-group via the entry macros.
- layout
number (integer, default 1)
- Set the menu layout. The argument must be a number between 0 and 4.
- limit
max-articles (integer, default infinite)
- Limit the maximum number of articles presented in each group to
max-articles. The default is to present all unread articles
no matter how many there are. Setting this variable, only the most recent
max-articles articles will be presented, but all the articles will
still be marked as read. This is useful to get up-to-date quickly if you
have not read news for a longer period.
- lines
lin (integer, default screen height)
- This variable contains the screen height i.e. number of lines.
- If set nn will not put an empty line after the header line and an
empty line before the prompt line; this gives you two extra menu
lines.
- macro-debug (boolean,
default false)
- If set nn will trace the execution of all macros. Prior to the
execution of each command or operation in a macro, it will show the name
of the command or the input string or key stroke at the bottom of the
screen.
- mail
file (string, default not set)
- file must be a full path name of a file. If defined, nn will
check for arrival of new mail every minute or so by looking at the
specified file.
- mail-alias-expander
program (string, default not set)
- When set, aliases used in mail responses may be expanded by the specified
program. The program will be given the completed response in a file
as its only argument, and the aliases should be expanded directly in this
file (of course the program may use temporary files and other means
to expand the aliases as long the the result is stored in the provided
file).
Notice: currently there are no alias expanders delivered with nn.
Warning: Errors in the expansion process may lead to the response not being
sent.
- mail-format (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will save articles in a format that is compatible with
normal mail folders. Unless folder-format-check is false, it is
only used to specify the format used when new folders are created. This
variable is ignored if mmdf-format is set.
- The headers string specifies one or more extra header lines
(separated by semi-colons `;') which are added to the header of mail sent
from nn using the reply and mail commands. For
example:
set mail-header Reply-To: storm@texas.dk;Organization: TI - DK
To include a semicolon `;' in a header, precede it by a backslash (which
must be doubled because of the conventions for entering strings).
- mail-record
file (string, default not set)
- file must be a full path name of a file. If defined, all replies
and mail will be saved in this file in standard mailbox format,
i.e. you can use you favourite mailer (and nn) to look at the
file.
- mail-script
file (string, default not set)
- When set, nn will use the specified file instead of the standard
aux script when executing the reply and mail
commands.
- mailer
shell-command (string, default REC_MAIL)
- The program which is invoked by nn to deliver a message to the mail
transport. The program will be given a complete mail message including a
header containing the recipient's address. See also
mailer-pipe-input.
- mailer-pipe-input (boolean,
default true)
- When set, the message to be sent will be piped into the mailer
program. Otherwise, the file containing the message will be given as the
first (and only) argument to the mailer command.
- marked-by-next-group
N (integer, default 0)
- Specifies the amount of (unmarked) articles on the menu marked seen
by the N {next-group} command in selection mode. See
marked-by-read-skip for possible values of N.
- marked-by-read-return
N (integer, default 0)
- Specifies the amount of (unmarked) articles on the menu marked seen
by the Z {read-return} command in selection mode. See
marked-by-read-skip for possible values of N.
- marked-by-read-skip
N (integer, default 4)
- Specifies the amount of (unmarked) articles on the menu marked seen
by the X {read-skip} command in selection mode. The
following values of N are recognized:
0: No articles are marked seen
1: Current page is marked seen
2: Previous pages are marked seen
3: Previous and current pages are marked seen
4: All pages are marked seen
- mark-overlap (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will draw a line (using the underline capabilities of
the terminal if possible) to indicate the end of the overlap (see the
overlap variable).
- mark-overlap-shading (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will shade overlapping lines (see the
overlap variable) using the attributes defined by the
shading-on and shading-off variables (of if not set, with
the underline attribute). This is typically used to give overlapping lines
a different colour on terminals which have this capability.
- When mode is a non-zero number as described below, nn will
add blank lines between the lines on the menu to increase readability at
the cost of presenting fewer articles on each page. The following values
of mode are recognized:
0: Don't add blank lines between menu lines.
1: Add a blank line between articles with different subjects.
2: Add a blank line between all articles.
- merge-report-rate
rate (integer, default 1)
- When nn is invoked with the -m option (directly or via
nngrap), a status report of the merging process is displayed and
updated on the screen every rate seconds. The report contains the
time used so far and an estimate of the time needed to complete the
merge.
- message-history
N (integer, default 15)
- Specifies the maximum number, N, of older messages which can be
recalled with the ^P {message} command.
- min-window
size (integer, default 7)
- When the window variable is not set, nn will clear the
screen to preview an article if there are less than size unused
lines at the bottom of the menu screen.
- mmdf-format (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will save articles in MMDF format. Unless
folder-format-check is false, it is only used to specify the format
used when new folders are created.
- monitor (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will show all characters in the received
messages using a "cat -v" like format. Otherwise, only the
printable characters are shown (default).
- motd (boolean, default
true)
- When set, nn will display the message of the day on start-up
if it has changed since it was last shown. The message is taken from the
file "motd" in the lib directory. It can also be shown (again)
using the :motd command.
- multi-key-guard-time
timeout (integer, default 2)
- When reading a multi-key sequence from the keyboard, nn will expect
the characters constituting the multi-key to arrive "quickly"
after each other. When a partial multi-key sequence is read, nn
will wait (at least) timeout tenths of a second for each of the
following characters to arrive to complete the multi-key sequence. If the
multi-key sequence is not completed within this period, nn
will read the partial multi-key sequence as individual characters instead.
This way it is still possible to use for example the ESC key on a terminal
with vt100 like arrow keys. When nn is used via an rlogin
connection, you may have to increase the timeout to get reliable
recognition of multi-keys.
- new-group-action
action (integer, default 3)
- This variable controls how new groups are treated by nn. It is an
integer variable, and the following values can be used. Some of these
actions (marked with an *) will only work when keep-unsubscribed is
set, since the presence of a group in .newsrc is the only way to recognize
it as an old group:
0) Ignore groups which are not in .newsrc. This will
obviously include new groups, and therefore you must explicitly add any
new groups that you care about (by editing the .newsrc file, or
using the G menu command and then subscribing to the group). When
NNTP is being used, this setting prevents the active.times
data from being read from the server; this can be helpful when using a
slow link, since the data can often be hundreds of KBytes long.
1*) Groups not in .newsrc are considered to be new, and
are inserted at the beginning of the .newsrc file.
2*) Groups not in .newsrc are considered to be new, and
are appended to the end of the .newsrc file.
3) New groups are recognized via a time-stamp saved in
the file .nn/LAST and in the database, i.e. it is not dependent on the
groups currently in .newsrc. The new groups are automatically appended
to .newsrc with subscription. Old groups not present in .newsrc will be
considered to be unsubscribed.
4) As 3, but the user is asked to confirm that
the new group should be appended to .newsrc. If rejected, the group will
not be appended to .newsrc, and thus be regarded as unsubscribed.
5) As 4, except that the information is stored
in a format compatible with the rn news reader (.rnlast). This
needs to be tested!
- new-style-read-prompt (boolean,
default true)
- When set, the reading mode prompt line includes the group name and the
number of selected articles in the group.
- The headers string specifies one or more extra header lines
(separated by semi-colons `;') which are added to the header of articles
posted from nn using the follow and post commands.
See mail-header for an example.
- news-record
file (string, default not set)
- Save file for follow-ups and postings. Same rules and format as the
mail-record variable.
- news-script
file (string, default not set)
- When set, nn will use the specified file instead of the standard
aux script when executing the follow and post
commands.
- newsrc file
(string, default "~/.newsrc") Specifies the
- file used by nn to register which groups and articles have been
read. The default setting corresponds to the .newsrc file used by other
news readers. Notice that nn release 6.4 onwards does allow
individual articles to be marked unread, and some articles marked unread,
and thus no longer messes up .newsrc for other news readers! Also see
nntp-server.
- nn-directory
directory (string, default "~/.nn")
- It only makes sense to set this variable on the command line, e.g.
"nn-directory=$HOME/.nn2" since it is looked at before the init
file is read. It must be set to a full pathname. Usually set when using
multiple servers; see newsrc above and nntp-server
below.
- nntp-cache-dir
directory (string, default "~/.nn")
- When NNTP is used, nn needs to store articles temporarily on disk.
This variable specifies which directory nn will use to hold these
files. The default value may be changed during configuration. This
variable can only be set in the init file.
- nntp-cache-size
size (integer, default 10, maximum 10)
- Specifies the number of temporary files in the nntp cache. The default and
maximum values may be changed during configuration.
- nntp-debug (boolean,
default false)
- When set, a trace of the nntp related traffic is displayed in the message
line on the screen.
- nntp-server
hostname or filename (string)
- It only makes sense to set this variable on the command line, e.g.
"nntp-server=news.some.domain", since it is looked at before the
init file, If you use multiple servers, you probably want to set the
nn-directory and newsrc variables on the command line to
alternate names as well, since some of the data files are server
dependent.
- old
[max-articles] (integer, default not set)
- When old is set, nn will present (or scan) all (or the last
max-articles) unread as well as read articles. While old is
set, nn will never mark any unread articles as read.
- old-packname (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn display names identically to nn-6.6.5 (and earlier). Only set
this if you have a large number of entries in your killfile that no longer
work due to the new behaviour. Note that in the long run, this option will
go away, so it's best to update your killfile rather than set this.
- orig-to-include-mask
N (integer, default 3)
- When replying to an article, nn will include some of the header
lines which may be used to construct a proper mail address for the poster
of the original article. These addresses are placed on Orig-To:
lines in the reply header and will automatically be removed before the
letter is sent. This variable specifies which headers from the article are
included; its value N is the sum of the following values:
1: Reply-To:
2: From:
4: Path:
- overlap
lines (integer, default 2)
- Specifies the number of overlapping lines from one page to the next when
paging through an article in reading mode. The last line from the previous
page will be underlined if the terminal has that capability.
- This is the pager used by the :admin command (and nnadmin)
when it executes certain commands, e.g. grepping in the Log file.
- patch-command
shell-command (string, default "patch -p0")
- This is the command which is invoked by the :patch command.
- post-distribution
words (string, default see below)
- This variable controls how the Distribution: header is constructed when
posting an original article. Its value is a list of words selected
from the following list:
[ ask ] [ default | distribution ]
This is interpreted in two steps:
- First the default distribution is determined. If default is
specified (or distribution is omitted), the value of
default-distribution is used. Otherwise, the specified
distribution (any word) is used as the default.
- Then if ask is specified, the user will be asked to confirm the
default distribution or provide another distribution.
The default value of post-distribution is ask
default, i.e. use the default-distribution with
confirmation from the user.
- preview-continuation
cond (integer, default 12)
- This variable determines on what terms the following article should be
automatically shown when previewing an article, and the
next-article command is used, or continue is used at the end
of the article. The following values can be used:
0 - never show the next article (return to the menu).
1 - always show the next article (use 'q' to return to the menu).
2 - show the next article if it has the same subject as the current
article, else return to the menu.
The value should be the sum of two values: one for the action after
using continue on the last page of the article, and one for the
action performed when the next-article command is used
multiplied by 10.
- preview-mark-read (boolean,
default true)
- When set, previewing an article will mark the article as read.
- previous-also-read (boolean,
default true)
- When set, going back to the previously read group with P
{previous} will include articles read in the current invocation of
nn even if there are still unread articles in the group.
- Specifies the list of header fields that are output when an article is
printed via the :print command and print-header-type is 1
(short header). The fields specification is described in the
section on Customized Article Headers below.
- Specifies what kind of header is printed by the :print command,
corresponding to the three save-* commands: 0 prints only
the article body (no header), 1 prints a short header, and 2
prints the full article header.
- printer
shell-command (string, default is system dep.)
- This is the default value for the print command. It should include
an option which prevents the spooler from echoing a job-id or similar to
the terminal to avoid problems with screen handling (e.g. lp -s on System
V).
- query-signature (boolean,
default ...)
- Will cause nn to require confirmation before appending the
.signature file to out-going mail or news if the corresponding
append-sig-... variable is set.
- quick-count (boolean,
default true)
- When set, calculating the total number of unread articles at start-up is
done by simple subtracting the first unread article number from the total
number of articles in each group. This is very fast, and fairly accurate
but it may be a bit too large. If not set, each line in .newsrc will be
interpreted to count every unread article, thus giving a very accurate
number. This variable is also used by nncheck.
- quick-save (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will not prompt for a file name when an article is
saved (unless it belongs to a folder). Instead it uses the save file
specified for the current group in the init file or the default save
file.
- re-layout
N (integer, default 0)
- Normally on the menu, nn will prefix the subject a number of
`>'s corresponding to the number of references on the References: line.
The re-layout variable may be set to use a different prefix on the
subjects:
0: One `>' per reference is shown (default).
1: A single `>' is shown if the Subject contains Re:.
2: The number of references is shown as `n>'
3: A single Re: is shown.
4: If any references use layout 0, else layout 1.
- re-layout-read
N (integer, default -1)
- When the header-lines variable is not set, or contains the
"*" field specifier, a line similar to the menu line will be
used as the header of the article in reading mode, including the sender's
name and the article's subject. When this variable is negative, the
subject on this header line will be prefixed according to the
re-layout variable. Otherwise, it will define the format of the
"Re:" prefix to be used instead of the re-layout used on
the menu.
- read-return-next-page (boolean,
default false)
- When set, the Z {read-return} command will return to the
next menu page rather than the current menu page.
- record
file (string, no default)
- Setting this pseudo variable will set both the mail-record
and the news-record variables to the specified pathname.
- repeat (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will not eliminate duplicated subject lines on menus
(I cannot imagine why anyone should want that, but....)
- repeat-group-query (boolean,
default false)
- When set, invoking nn with the -g option will always repeat
the query for a group to enter until you quit explicitly. (Same as setting
the -r option permanently).
- report-cost (boolean,
default true)
- This variable is ignored unless nn is running with accounting
enabled (see nnacct). When set, nn will report the cost of
the current session and the total on exit.
- response-check-pause
pause (integer, default 2)
- Specifies the number of seconds to wait after posting an article to see
whether the action *might* have failed. Some commands run in the
background and may thus not have completed during this period, so even
when nn says "Article posted", it may still fail (in
which case you are informed via mail).
- response-default-answer
action (string, default "send")
- The default action to be taken when hitting return to the
"response action" prompt (abort, edit, send, view, write). If it
is unset, no default action is defined.
- retain-seen-status (boolean,
default false)
- Normally, seen articles will just be unread the next time the group is
entered (unless they were marked read by auto-junk-seen). If
retain-seen-status is set, the seen attribute on the articles will
survive to the next time the group is entered. (This is not recommended
because it may result in very large select files).
- retry-on-error
times (integer, default 0)
- When set, nn will try the specified number of times to open
an article before reporting that the article does not exist any more. This
may be necessary in some network environments.
- save-closed-mode
mode (integer, default 13)
- When saving an article in selection mode (i.e. by selecting it from the
menu), nn will simply save the specified article if the article's
subject is open. When the selected menu entry is a closed subject,
the save-closed-mode variable determines how many articles among
the closed articles should be saved:
0: save root article (the one on the menu) only
1: save selected articles within subject
2: save unread (excl selected) articles within subject
3: save selected+unread articles within subject
4: save all articles within subject
If `10' is added to the above values, nn will not save the selected
subject immediately; instead it will ask which articles to save using the
above value as the default answer.
- save-counter
format (string, default "%d")
- This is the printf-format which nn uses to create substitution
string for the trailing * in save file names. You can set this to more
complex formats if you like, but be sure that it will produce different
strings for different numbers. An alternative format which seems to be
popular is ".%02d" .
- save-counter-offset
N (integer, default 0)
- Normally, file names created with the part.* form will substitute
the * with successive numbers starting from one. Setting this
variable will cause these numbers to start from N+1.
- Specifies the list of header fields that are saved when an article is
saved via the O {save-short} command. The fields
specification is described in the section on Customized Article Headers
below.
- save-report (boolean,
default true)
- When set, a message reporting the number of lines written is shown after
saving an article. Since messages are shown for a few seconds, this may
slow down the saving of many articles (e.g. using the S*
command).
- scroll-clear-page (boolean,
default true)
- Determines whether nn clears the screen before showing each new
page of an article.
- scroll-last-lines
N (integer, default 0)
- Normally, nn will show each new page of an article from the top of
the screen (with proper marking of the overlap). When this variable is set
to a negative value, nn will scroll the text of the new pages from
the bottom of the screen instead. If it is set to a positive value,
nn will show pages from the top as usual, but switch to scrolling
when there are less than the specified number of lines left in the
article.
- select-leave-next (boolean,
default false)
- When set, you will be asked whether to select articles with the
leave-next attribute on entry to a group with left over
articles.
- select-on-sender (boolean,
default false)
- Specifies whether the find (=) command in article selection mode
will match on the subject or the sender.
- shading-on
code... (control string, default not set)
- Specifies the escape code to be sent to the terminal to cause
"shading" of the following output to the screen. This is used if
the mark-overlap-shading is set, and by the `+' attribute in the
header-lines variable.
- shading-off
code... (control string, default not set)
- Specifies the escape code to be sent to the terminal to turn off the
shading defined by shading-on. Shading will typically be done by
changing the foreground colour to change, e.g.
on term ti924-colour
set shading-on ^[ [ 3 2 m
set shading-off ^[ [ 3 7 m
set mark-overlap-shading
unset mark-overlap
end
- shell
program (string, default $SHELL)
- The shell program used to execute shell escapes.
- shell-restrictions (boolean,
default false)
- When set (in the init file), nn will not allow the user to invoke
the shell in any way, including saving on pipes. It also prevents the user
from changing certain variables containing commands.
- show-purpose-mode
N (integer, default 1)
- Normally, nn will show the purpose of a group the first time it is
read, provided a purpose is known. Setting this variable, this behaviour
can be changed as follows:
0: Never show the purpose.
1: Show the purpose for new groups only.
2: Show the purpose for all groups.
When NNTP is being used, a setting of 0 prevents the newsgroups
purpose data from being read from the server; this can be helpful when
using a slow link, since the data can often be hundreds of KBytes
long.
- sign-type (string,
default pgp)
- What program nn will use to sign messages via the Sign command. Only
pgp and gpg are currently valid.
- silent (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn won't print the logo or "No News" if there
are no unread articles. Only useful to set in the init file or with the
-Q option.
- slow-mode (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will cut down on the screen output to give better
response time at low speed. Normally, nn will use standout mode (if
possible) to mark selected articles on the menu, but when slow-mode
is set, nn will just put an asterisk `*' next to the article
identifier on selected articles. Also when slow-mode is set
nn will avoid redrawing the screen in the following cases: After a
goto-group command an empty menu is shown (hit space to make
it appear), and after responding to an article, only the prompt line is
shown (use ^L to redraw the screen). To avoid redrawing the screen after
an extended command, set the delay-redraw variable as well.
- slow-speed
speed (integer, default 1200)
- If the terminal is running at this baud rate or lower, the on
slow (see the section on init files) condition will be true, and
the on fast will be false (and vice-versa).
- sort (boolean, default
true)
- When set, nn will sort articles according to the current
sort-mode on entry to a group. Otherwise, articles will be
presented in order of arrival. If not set on entry to a menu for merged
groups, the articles from each group will be kept together on the menu. If
sort is unset while merged groups are presented on the menu, the
articles will be reordered by local article number (which may not keep
articles from the same group together).
- sort-mode
mode (integer, default 1)
- The default sort algorithm used to sort the articles on entry to a news
group. It is a numeric value corresponding to one of the sorting methods
described in connection with the :sort command:
0 - arrival (ordered by article number)
1 - subject (subjects ordered after age of first article)
2 - lexical (subjects in lexicographical order)
3 - age (articles ordered after posting date only)
4 - sender (articles ordered after sender's name)
- spell-checker
shell-command (string, default not set)
- When set, responses can be checked for spelling mistakes via the (i)spell
action. The command to perform the spelling is given the file containing
the full article including header as its only argument. If the spell
checker can fix spelling mistakes, it must apply the changes directly to
this file.
- split (boolean,
default true)
- When set, digests will automatically and silently be split into
sub-articles which are then handled transparently as normal articles.
Otherwise, digests are presented as one article (which you can split on
demand with the G command).
- stop
lines (integer, default not set)
- When stop is set, nn will only show the first lines
lines of the of each article before prompting you to continue. This is
useful on slow terminals and modem lines to be able to see the first few
lines of longer articles (and skipping the rest with the n
command).
- subject-match-limit
length (integer, default 256)
- Subjects will be considered identical if their first length
characters match. Setting this uncritically to a low value may cause
unexpected results!
- subject-match-offset
offset (integer, default 0)
- When set to a positive number, that many characters at the beginning of
the subject will be ignored when comparing subjects for ordering and
equality purposes.
- subject-match-parts (boolean,
default false)
- When set, two subjects will be considered equal if they are identical up
to the first (differing) digit. Together with the
subject-match-offset variable, this can be used in source groups
where the subject often has a format like:
vXXXXXX: Name of the package (Part 01/04)
Setting subject-match-offset to 8 and
subject-match-parts to true will make nn consider all four
parts of the package having the same subject (and thus be selectable
with `*').
Notice that changing the subject-match-... variables
manually will not have an immediate effect. To reorder the menu, an
explicit :sort command must be performed. These variables are
mainly intended to be set using the :local command in on
entry macros for source and binary groups (entry macros are
evaluated before the menu is collected and sorted).
- subject-match-minimum
characters (integer, default 4)
- When set to a positive number, that many characters at the beginning of
the subject must match before the subject-match-parts option comes into
affect. This is important, because the part matching causes the rest of
the line to be ignored after the first digit pair is discovered. This
begins after any subject-match-offset has been applied.
- suggest-default-save (boolean,
default true)
- When set, nn will present the default-save-file when
prompting for a save file name in a group without a specific save file, or
folder-save-file when saving from a folder. When not set, no file
name is presented, and to use the default save file, a single + must be
specified.
- tidy-newsrc (boolean,
default false)
- When set, nn will automatically remove lines from .newsrc which
represent groups not found in the active file or unsubscribed groups if
keep-unsubscribed is not set.
- time (boolean, default
true)
- When set, nn will show the current time in the prompt line. This is
useful on systems without a sysline (1) utility.
- trace-folder-packing (boolean,
default true)
- When set, a trace of the retained and deleted messages is printed when a
folder is rewritten.
- trusted-escape-codes
codes (string, default none)
- When set to a list of one or more characters, nn will trust and
output escape characters in an article if it is followed by one of
the characters in the list. For example, to switch to or from kanji mode,
control codes like "esc $" and
"esc ( J" may be present in the text. To
allow these codes, use the following command:
set trusted-escape-codes ($
You can also set it to all to pass all escape codes
through to the screen. Notice that nn thinks all characters
(including esc) output to the screen as occupy one column.
- unshar-command
shell-command (string, default "/bin/sh")
- This is the command which is invoked by the unshar command.
- The name of the file in which the header and initial text of articles
unpacked with the :unshar command is saved. Unless the file name
starts with a `/', the file will be created in the same directory as the
unpacked files. The information is not saved if this variable is not set.
Setting it to "Unshar.Result" will cause the headers and the
results from the unpacking process to be merged in a meaningful way
(unless mmdf-format is set).
- unsubscribe-mark-read (boolean,
default true)
- When set, unsubscribing to a group will automatically mark all current
articles read; this is recommended to keep the size of .newsrc down.
Otherwise, unread articles in the unsubscribe groups are kept in .newsrc.
If keep-unsubscribed is false, this variable has no effect.
- update-frequency (integer,
default 1)
- Specifies how many changes need to be done to the .newsrc or select files
before they are written back to disk. The default setting causes .newsrc
to be updated every time a group has been read.
- use-editor-line (boolean,
default true)
- Most editors accept arguments of the form:
editor [-arguments] +n filename
where editor is the name of the editor, and n is the line number to put the
cursor upon entering the file. If use-editor-line is false, it will not
add the "+n" to the arguments.
- use-path-in-from (boolean,
default false)
- When mail-format is set, saved articles will be preceded by a
specially formatted "From " line:
From origin date
Normally, the origin will be the name of the news group where the article
appeared, but if use-path-in-from is set, the contents of the
"Path:" header will be used as the origin.
- use-selections (boolean,
default true)
- When set, nn uses the selections and other article attributes saved
last time nn was used. If not set, nn ignores the select
file.
- visible-bell (boolean,
default true)
- When set, nn will flash the screen instead of "ringing the
bell" if the visible bell (flash) capability is defined in the
termcap/terminfo database.
- window
size (integer, default not set)
- When set, nn will reserve the last size lines of the menu
screen for a preview window. If not set, nn will clear the screen
to preview an article if there are less than min-window lines at
the bottom of the screen. As a side effect, it can also be used to reduce
the size of the menus, which may be useful on slow terminals.
- word-key
key (key, default ^W)
- The key which erases the last input component or word when nn is
prompting for a string, e.g. the last name in a path name.
- When set (non-negative), the customized header fields specified in
header-lines will be split across several lines if they don't fit
on one line. When size is greater than zero, lines will be split at
the first space occurring in the last size columns of the line. If
not set (or negative), long header lines will be truncated if they don't
fit on a single line.
Normally, nn will just print a (high-lighted) single line
header containing the author, subject, and date (optional) of the article
when it is read.
By setting the header-lines variable as described below, it
is possible to get a more informative multi line header with optional
high-lighting and underlining.
The header-lines variable is set to a list of header line
identifiers, and the customized headers will then contain exactly these
header lines in the specified order.
The same specifications are also used by the :print and
save-short commands via the print-header-lines and
save-header-lines variables.
The following header line identifiers are recognized in the
header-lines, print-header-lines, and save-header-lines
variables:
A Approved:
a Spool-File: (path of spool file containing the article)
B Distribution:
C Control:
D Date:
d Date-Received:
F From:
f Sender:
G Newsgroup: (current group)
g Newsgroup: (current group if cross-posted or merged)
I Message-Id:
K Keywords:
L Lines:
N Newsgroups:
n Newsgroups: (but only if cross posted)
O Organization:
P Path:
R Reply-To:
S Subject:
v Save-File: (the default save file for this article)
W Followup-To:
X References:
x Back-References:
Y Summary:
The 'G' and 'g' fields will include the local article number if it
is known, e.g.
Newsgroup: news.software.nn/754
The following special symbols are recognized in the
header-lines variable (and ignored otherwise):
Preceding the identifier with an equal sign "=" or an
underscore "_" will cause the header field contents to be
high-lighted or underlined.
A plus sign "+" will use the shading attribute defined
by shading-on and shading-off to high-light the field
contents. If no shading attribute is defined it will underline the field
instead.
Including an asterisk "*" in the list will produce the
standard one line header at that point.
Example: The following setting of the header-lines variable
will show the author (underlined), organization, posting date, and subject
(high-lighted) when articles are read:
set header-lines _FOD=S
Some of the command line options have already been described, but
below we provide a complete list of the effect of each option by showing the
equivalent set, unset, or toggle command.
Besides the options described below, you can set any of
nn's variables directly on the command line via an argument of the
following format:
variable=value
To set or unset a boolean variable, the value can be specified as
on or off (t and f will also work).
Notice that the init files are read before the options are
parsed (unless you use the -I option). Therefore, the options which
are related to boolean variables set in the init file will toggle the value
set there, rather than the default value. Consequently, the meaning of the
options are also user-defined.
The explanations below describe the effect related to the default
setting of the variables, with the `reverse' effect in square brackets.
- -aN {set limit N}
- Limit the maximum number of articles presented in each group to
N. This is useful to get up-to-date quickly if you have not read
news for a longer period.
- -a0
- Mark all unread articles as read. See the full explanation at the
beginning of this manual.
- -B {toggle
backup}
- Do not [do] backup the rc file.
- -d {toggle
split}
- Do not [do] split digests into separate articles.
- -f {toggle
fsort}
- Do not [do] sort folders according to the subject (present the articles in
a folder in the sequence in which they were saved).
- -g
- Prompt for the name of a news group or folder to be entered
- -i {toggle
case-fold-search}
- Normally searches with -n and -s are case independent. Using
this option, the case becomes significant.
- -I
- Do not read the init file. This must be the first option!! The global
setup file is still read.
- -Ifile-list
- Specifies an alternate list of init files to be loaded instead of the
standard global and private init files. The list is a comma-separated list
of file names. Names which does not contain a `/' are looked for in the
~/.nn directory. An empty element in the list is interpreted as the global
init file. The list of init files must not be separated from the
-I option by blanks, and it must be the first option. Example: The
default behaviour corresponds to using -I,init (first the global file,
then the file ~/.nn/init). The global setup file is still read as
the first init file independently of the -I option used.
- -k {toggle
kill}
- Do not [do] perform automatic kill and selection of articles.
- -lN {set
stop N}
- Stop after printing the first N lines of each article. This is
useful on slow terminals.
- -L[f] {set
layout f}
- Select alternative menu layout f (0 to 4). If f is omitted,
menu layout 3 is selected.
- -m {no corresponding
variable}
- Merge all articles into one `meta group' instead of showing them one group
at a time. When -m is used, no articles will be marked as read.
- -nWORD
- Collect only articles which contain the string WORD in the sender's
name (case is ignored). If WORD starts with a slash `/', the rest
of the argument is used as a regular expression instead of a fixed
string.
- -N {no corresponding
variable}
- Disable updating of the rc file. This includes not recording that groups
have been read or unsubscribed to (although nn will think so until
you quit).
- -q {toggle sort}
- Do not [do] sort the articles (q means quick, but it isn't any quicker in
practice!)
- -Q {toggle
silent}
- Quiet mode - don't [do] print the logo or "No News"
messages.
- -r {toggle repeat-group-query}
- Make -g repeat query for a group to enter.
- -sWORD
- Collect only articles which contain the string WORD in their
subject (case is ignored). If WORD starts with a slash `/', the
rest of the argument is used as a regular expression instead of a
fixed string.
- -S {toggle
repeat}
- Do not [do] eliminate duplicated subject lines on menus.
- -T {toggle
time}
- Do not [do] show the current time in the prompt line.
- -w[N] {set window N}
- Reserve N lines of the menu screen for a preview window. If
N is omitted, the preview window is set to 5 lines.
- -W {toggle
confirm-messages}
- [Don't] Wait for confirmation on all messages.
- -x[N] {set old
N}
- Present (or scan) all (or the last N) unread as well as read
articles. This will never mark unread articles as read.
- -X {no corresponding
variable}
- Read/scan unsubscribed groups also. Most useful when looking for a
specific subject in all groups, e.g.
nn -mxX -sSubject all
Practically any combination of commands and key strokes can be
defined as a macro which can be bound to a single key in menu and/or reading
mode.
The macro definition must specify a sequence of commands and key
strokes as if they were typed directly from the keyboard. For example, a
string specifying a file name must follow a save command. This manual does
not give a complete specification of all the input required by the various
commands; it is recommended to execute the desired command sequence from the
keyboard prior to defining the macro to get the exact requirements of each
command.
Although it is possible to define temporary macros interactively
using the :define command, macro definitions are normally placed in
the init file. Macros are numbered from 0 to 100, i.e. it is possible
to define a total of 101 different macros (implicit macros defined with the
map command uses internal numbers from 101 to 200).
To define macro number M, the following construction is
used (the line breaks are mandatory):
define M
body
end
The body consists of a sequence of tokens separated
by white space (blanks or newlines). However, certain tokens continue
to the end of the current line.
The following tokens may occur in the macro
body:
- Empty lines and text following a # character (preceded by white space) is
ignored.
- Command
Names
- Any command name listed in the key mapping section can be included in a
macro causing that command to be invoked when the macro is executed.
- Extended
Commands
- All the extended commands which can be executed through the command
command (normally bound to the : key) can also be executed in a macro. An
extended command starts with a colon (:) and continues to the end of the
current line. Example:
:show groups total
- Key Strokes
- A key stroke (which is normally mapped into a command depending on the
current mode) is specified as a key name enclosed in single quotes.
Examples (A-key, left arrow key, RETURN key):
'A' 'left' '^M'
- Shell
Commands
- External commands can be invoked as part of a macro execution. There are
two forms of shell command invocations available depending on whether a
command may produce output or require user input, or it is
guaranteed to complete without input or output to the terminal. The
difference is that in the latter case, nn does not prepare the
terminal to be used by another program. When the command completes, the
screen is not redrawn automatically; you should use the
redraw command to do that. The tho forms are:
:!echo this command uses the terminal
:!!echo this command does not > /tmp/file
- Strings
- Input to commands prompting for a string, e.g. a file name, can be
specified in a macro as a double quoted string. Example (save without
prompting for a file name):
save-short "+$G"
- Conditionals
- Conditionals may occur anywhere in a macro; a conditional is evaluated
when the macro is executed, and if the condition is false the rest
of the current line is ignored. The following conditionals are
available:
?menu True in menu mode
?show True in reading mode
?folder True when looking at a folder
?group True when looking at a news group
?yes Query user, true if answer is yes
?no Query user, true if answer is no
Example (stop macro execution if user rejects to continue):
prompt "continue? " ?no break
In addition to these conditionals, it is possible to test the
current value of boolean and integer variables using the following
form:
?variable=value
This conditional will be true (1) if the variable is an integer variable
whose current value is the one specified, or (2) if the variable is a
boolean variable which is either on or off. Examples:
?layout=3 :set layout 1
?monitor=on break
?sort=off :sort age
- break
- Terminate macro execution completely. This includes nested macros. Example
(stop if looking at a folder):
?folder break
- return
- Terminate execution of current macro. If the current macro is called from
another macro, execution of that macro continues immediately.
- input
- Query the user for a key stroke or a string, for example a file name.
Example (prompt the user for a file name in the usual way):
save-short input
- yes
- Confirm unconditionally if a command requires confirmation. It is
ignored if the command does not require confirmation. Example (confirm
creation of new files):
save-short "+$G" yes
- no
- Terminate execution of current macro if a command requires
confirmation; otherwise ignore it. If neither yes nor no is
specified when a command requires confirmation, the user must answer the
question as usual - if the user confirms the action execution continues
normally; otherwise the execution of the current macro is terminated.
Example (do not create new files):
save-short "+$L/misc" no
- prompt
string
- Print the string in the prompt line (highlighted). The string must
be enclosed in double quotes. Example:
prompt "Enter recipient name"
When the macro terminates, the original prompt shown on entry to the macro
will automatically be redrawn. If this is not desirable (e.g. if the macro
goes from selection to reading mode), the redrawing of the prompt can be
disabled by using a prompt command with an empty string
(""). Example:
prompt "Enter reading mode?" # old prompt is saved
?no return # and old prompt is restored
read-skip # changes the prompt
prompt "" # so forget old prompt
- echo
string
- Display the string in the prompt line for a short period. Example:
?show echo "Cannot be used in reading mode" break
- puts
string-to-end-of-line
- The rest of the line is output directly to the terminal without
interpretation.
- macro
M
- Invoke macro number M. The maximum macro nesting level is five
(also catches macro loops).
I use the following macro to quickly save all the selected files
in a file whose name is entered as usual. It also works in reading mode
(saving just the current article).
define 1
:unset save-report
save-short input yes
?menu '+'
:set save-report
end
The descriptions of the keys and commands provided in this manual
reflects the default key mappings in nn. However, you can easily
change these mappings to match your personal demands, and it is also
possible to remap keys depending on the terminal in use. Permanent remapping
of keys must be done through the init file, while temporary changes
(for the duration of the current invocation of nn) can be made with
the :map command.
The binding and mapping of keys are controlled by four tables:
- The multikey definition
table
- This table is used for mapping multicharacter key sequences into single
characters. By default the table contains the mappings for the four cursor
keys, and there is room for 10 user-defined multikeys. The fourteen
multikeys are named: up, down, right, left
(the four arrow keys), and #0 through #9 for the
user-defined keys.
Multikey #i (where i is a digit or an arrow key
name) is defined using the following command:
map #i key-sequence
where the sequence is a list of 7-bit character names
(see below) separated by spaces. For example, if the HOME key sends the
sequence ESC [ H, you can define multikey #0 to be the home key using
the command:
map #0 ^[ [ H
- The input key mapping
table
- All characters that are read from the keyboard will be mapped through the
input mapping table. Consequently, you can globally remap one key to
produce any other key value. By default all keys are mapped into
themselves.
An entry in the input key mapping table to map
input-key into new-key is made with the command
map key input-key new-key
For example, to make your ESC key function as interrupt
you can use the command
map key ^[ ^G
- The selection mode key
binding table
- This table defines for each key which command should be invoked when that
key is pressed in selection mode, i.e. when the article menu is shown. The
command to bind a key to a command in selection mode is:
map menu key command
For example, to have the HOME key defined as multikey #0 above
bound to the select command, the following command is used:
map menu #0 select
To remap a key to select a specific article on the menu (which
the `a' through `z' keys do by default), the command must be
specified as `article N' where N is the entry
number on the menu counted from zero (i.e. a=0, b=1, ..., z=25, 0=26,
..., 9=35). For example, to map `J' to select article `j', the following
command is used:
map menu J article 9
- The reading mode key
binding table
- This table defines for each key which command should be invoked when that
key is pressed in reading mode, i.e. when the article text is shown. The
command to bind a key to a command in reading mode is:
map show key command
In addition to the direct mappings described above, the following
variations of the map command are available:
- User defined
keymaps
- Additional keymaps can be defined using the command
make map newmap
This will create a new keymap which can initialized using
normal map commands, e.g.
map newmap key command
To activate a user-defined keymap, it must be bound to a
prefix key:
map base-map prefix-key prefix newmap
When used, the prefix key itself does not activate a command,
but instead it require another key to be entered and then execute the
command bound to that key in the keymap which is bound to the prefix
key.
For example, to let the key sequence "^X i" execute macro
number 10 in both modes, the following commands can be used:
make map ctl-x
map ctl-x i macro 10
map both ^X prefix ctl-x
- Mapping keys in both
modes
- Using the pseudo-keymap `both', it is possible to map a key to a command
in both selection and reading mode at once. For example, to map the home
key to macro number 5 in both modes, the following command can be used:
map both #0 macro 5
- Aliasing
- A key can also be mapped directly to the command currently bound to
another key. Later remapping of the other key will not change the mapping
of the `aliased' key. This is done using the following command:
map keymap new-key as old-key
- Binding macros to
keys
- A previously defined macro can be bound to a key using the command:
map keymap key macro macro-number
- Implicit macro
definitions
- An implicit macro can also be defined directly in connection with the
map command:
map keymap key (
body...
)
Keys and character names are specified using the following
notation:
- C
- A single printable character represents the key or character itself.
- ^C
- This notation represents a control key or character. DEL is written as
^?
- 125, 0175, 0x7D
- Characters and keys can be specified by their ordinal value in decimal,
octal, and hexadecimal notation.
- up, down,
right, left
- These names represent the cursor keys.
- #0 through #9
- These symbols represent the ten user-defined multikeys.
If the variable data-bits is 7, key maps can specify
binding of all keys in the range 0x00 to 0x7F, and the 8th bit will be
stripped in all keyboard input. If the variable data-bits is 8, the
8th bit is not cleared, and key maps are extended to allow binding of keys
in the range 0xA0 to 0xFE (corresponding to the national characters defined
by the ISO 8859 character sets). Binding commands to these keys can be done
either by using their numeric value, or directly specifying the 8 bit
character in the map command, e.g.
map menu 0xC8 macro 72
map key e %
To show the current contents of the four tables, the following
versions of the :map command are available:
- :map
- Show the current mode's key bindings.
- :map menu
- Show the selection mode key bindings.
- :map show
- Show the reading mode key bindings.
- :map #
- Show the multikey definition table.
- :map key
- Show the input key mapping table.
Below is a list of all the commands that can be bound to keys,
either in selection mode, in reading mode, or both. For each command the
default command key bindings in both modes are shown. If the key is not
bound in one of the modes, but it can be bound, the corresponding part will
just be empty. If the command cannot be bound in one of the modes, that mode
will contain the word nix.
Function Selection mode Reading mode
advance-article nix a
advance-group A A
article N a-z0-9 nix
back-article nix b
back-group B B
cancel C C
command : :
compress nix c
continue space space
continue-no-mark return nix
decode
find = /
find-next nix .
follow F fF
full-digest nix H
goto-group G G
goto-menu nix = Z
help ? ?
junk-articles J nix
kill-select K K
layout " nix
leave-article nix l
leave-next L L
line+1 , down return
line-1 / nix
line=@ nix g
macro M
mail M m M
message ^P ^P
next-article nix n
next-group N N
next-subject nix k
nil
overview Y Y
page+1 > nix
page+1/2 nix d
page-1 < delete backspace
page-1/2 nix u
page=0 nix h
page=1 ^ ^
page=$ $ $
patch
post
preview % %
previous P p
print P
quit Q Q
read-return Z nix
read-skip X X
redraw ^L ^R ^L ^R
reply R r R
rot13 nix D
save-full S s S
save-short O o O
save-header E e E
save-body W w W
select . nix
select-auto + nix
select-invert @ nix
select-range - nix
select-subject * *
shell ! !
skip-lines nix tab
unselect-all ~ nix
unshar
unsub U U
version V V
See the descriptions of the default bindings for a description of
the commands. The pseudo command nil is used to unbind a
key.
The init files are used to customize nn's behaviour
to local conventions and restrictions and to satisfy each user's personal
taste.
Normally, nn reads up to three init files on start-up if they exist
(all init files are optional):
- $LIB/setup
- A system-wide file located in the library directory. This file is
always loaded before any other init file (even when the -I
option is specified). It cannot contain a group presentation
sequence.
- $LIB/init
- Another system-wide (global) init file located in the library directory.
This file may be ignored via the -I option.
- ~/.nn/init
- The private init file located in the user's .nn directory. It is
read after the global init file to allow the user to change the default
setup.
The init file is parsed one line at a time. If a line ends with a
backslash `\', the backslash is ignored, and the following line is appended
to the current line.
The init file may contain the following types of commands (and
data):
- Empty lines and lines with a # character as the first non-blank character
are ignored. Except where # has another meaning defined by the command
syntax (e.g. multi-keys are named #n), trailing comments on input
lines are ignored.
- Variable
settings
- You can set (or unset) all the variables described earlier
to change nn's behaviour permanently. The set and unset
commands you can use in the init file have exactly the same format as the
:set and :unset commands described earlier (except that the
: prefix is omitted.)
Variables can also be locked via the lock command; this
is typically done in the setup file to enforce local
policies.
- Key mappings
- You can use all the versions of the map command in the init
file.
- Macro
Definitions
- You can define sequences of commands and key strokes using the
define...end construction, which can then be bound to single
keys with the map command.
- Load terminal specific
files
- You can load a terminal specific file using the
load file
The character @ in the file will be replaced by
the terminal type defined in the TERM environment variable. nn
silently ignores the load command if the file does not exist (so
you don't have to have a specific init file for terminals which does not
require remapping). If the file is not specified by an absolute
pathname, it must reside in your ~/.nn directory. Examples:
# load local customizations
load /usr/lib/nninit
# load personal terminal specific customizations
load init.@
- Switch to loading a
different init file
- You can skip the rest of the current init file and start loading a
different init file with the following command:
chain file
If this occur in the private or global init file, the chained
init file may contain a sequence part which will replace the private or
global presentation sequence respectively.
- Stop loading current init
file
- You can skip the rest of the current init file with the following command:
stop
- Give error messages and/or
terminate
- If an error is detected in the init file, the following commands can be
used to print an error message and/or terminate execution:
error fatal error message...
Print the message and terminate execution.
echo warning message...
Print the message and continue.
exit [ status ]
Terminate nn with the specified exit status or 0 if omitted.
- Change working
directory of nn
- You can use the cd command to change the working directory whenever
you enter nn. Example:
# Use folder directory as working directory inside nn
cd ~/News
- Command
groups
- The init file can contain groups of commands which are executed under
special conditions. The command groups are described in the section on
command groups below.
- One or more save-files
sections
- A save-files section is used to assign default save files to
specific groups:
save-files
group-name (pattern) file-name
...
end
The group name (patterns) and save file names are specified in
the same way as in the presentation sequence (see below). Example:
save-files
news* +news/$L
comp.sources* /u/src/$L/
end
- The news group
presentation sequence
- The last part of the init file may specify the sequence in which
you want the news groups to be presented. This part starts with the
command sequence and continues to the end of the init file.
Both init files may contain a presentation sequence. In this case,
the global sequence is appended to the private sequence.
Command groups may only occur in the init file, and they provide a
way to have series of commands executed at certain points during news
reading.
In release 6.4 onwards, these possibilities are still rather
rudimentary, and a mixture of normal init file syntax and macro syntax is
used depending on whether the command group is only executed on start-up or
several times during the nn session.
A command group begins with the word on and ends with the
word end. The following command groups are conditionally executed
during the parsing of the init file if the specified condition is
true. They may also have an optional else part which is executed if
the condition is false:
on condition
commands
[ else
commands ]
end
The following conditional command groups may be used in the init
file to be executed at start-up:
- on [ test
]
- The commands (init file syntax) in the group are executed only if the
specified test is true. A shell is spawned to execute the command
"[ test ]", so all the options of the test(1)
command is available. For example, to unset the flow-control variable if
the tty is a pseudo-tty, the following conditional can be used:
on [ -n "`tty | grep ttyp`" ]
unset flow-control
end
- on !shell
command
- The command group is executed if the given shell command exits with
0 status (success). Care should be taken that the command does not produce
any output, e.g. by redirecting its output to /dev/null. For example, to
prevent people from reading news if load is above a specific level, the
following conditional might be placed in the global setup file.
on !load-above 5
error load is too high, try again later.
end
- on `shell
command` string...
- The command group is executed if the first output line from
executing the specified shell command is listed among the specified
string values. The shell command can be omitted on
subsequent occurrences of this conditional, in which case the output from
the last shell command is used. For example, the following
conditional can be used to switch to an init file which has a limited
sequence for news reading during working hours, evenings, and nights:
on `date +%H` 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
chain init.work
end
on `` 17 18 19 20 21
chain init.evening
else
chain init.night
end
- on ``
string...
- This is equivalent to the previous form except that instead of executing a
shell command, the output from the previous
- on $variable [
value ]
- If no value strings are specified, the command group is executed if
the given variable is defined in the environment. Otherwise, the
command group is executed only if the value of the variable occur
in the value list. For example, if you want nn to look for
mail in whatever $MAIL is set to - if it is set - you can use the
following code:
on $MAIL
set mail $(MAIL)
end
- on slow
-
The commands (init file syntax) in the group are executed only if the
current terminal output speed is less than or equal to the baud rate set
in the slow-speed variable. This can be used to optimize the
user-interface for slow terminals by setting suitable variables:
on slow
set confirm-entry
set slow-mode
set delay-redraw
unset visible-bell
set compress
unset header-lines
set stop 5
set window 10
end
- on fast
-
Same as on slow except that the commands are only executed when the
terminal is running at a speed above the slow-speed value.
- on term
term-type...
-
The commands are executed if one of the term-type names is identical
to value of the TERM environment variable.
- on host
host-name...
-
The commands are executed if the local host's name occur in the
host-name list.
- on program
program-name...
-
The commands are executed if the current program (nn, nncheck,
etc) in the program-name list.
The following on command groups are really macros which may
be executed during nn's normal processing, and as such they cannot
have an else part.
- on entry [ group
list ]
-
These commands (macro format!) are executed every time nn enters a
news group. If a group list is not specified, the commands are associated
with all groups which don't have its own entry macro specified in the
group sequence. Otherwise, the entry macro will be associated with the
groups in the list. The group list is specified using the meta-notations
described in the presentation sequence section.
All `:' commands at the beginning of the command group
are executed before nn collects the articles in the group,
so it is possible to set or unset variables like cross-post and
auto-read-mode-limit before any articles are collected and the
menu is (not) shown.
The non-`:' commands, and `:' commands that follows a command of another
type will be executed immediately after the first menu page is
presented. The execution of a `:' command can be postponed by using a
double `::' as the command prefix.
on entry comp.sources* alt.sources
:set cross-post on # set before collection
:local auto-read-mode-limit -1 # set before showing menu
::unset cross-post # set after collection
end
- on start-up
-
These `:' commands (macro format!) are executed on start-up just before
nn enters the first news group. However, postponed commands (i.e.
non-`:' commands) will not be executed until the first group is shown (it
works like an entry macro).
News groups are normally presented in the sequence defined in the
system-wide init file in nn's library directory.
You can personalize the presentation sequence by specifying an
alternative sequence in the private init file. The sequence in the
private init file is used before the global presentation sequence,
and need only describe the deviations from the default presentation
sequence.
The presentation sequence must start with the word
sequence
followed by a list of the news group names in the order you want them to be
presented. The group names must be separated by white space. The sequence list
must be the last part of the init file (the parsing of commands from
the init file stops when the word sequence is encountered).
You may use a full group name like
"comp.unix.questions", or just the name of a main group or
subgroup, e.g. "comp" or "comp.unix". However, if
"comp" precedes "comp.unix.questions" in the list, this
subgroup will be placed in the normal alphabetic sequence during the
collection of all the "comp" groups.
Groups which are not explicitly mentioned in any of the sequence
files will be placed after the mentioned groups, unless `!!' is used and it
has not been disabled (as described below).
Each group name may be followed by a file or folder name (must
start with either of `/' `~' or `+') which will specify the default save
file for that group (and its subgroups). A single `+' following the group
name is an abbreviation for the last save file name used. For example, the
following two sequences are equivalent:
group1 +file group2 +file group3 +file
group1 +file group2 + group3 +
When an article is saved, the default save name will be used as
the initial contents of the file name prompt for further editing. It
therefore does not need to be be a complete file name (unless you use the
quick save mode).
Each group name may also be associated with a so-called entry
action. This is basically an (unnamed) macro which is invoked on entry
to the group (following the same rules as the `on entry' command group
related to :set and :unset commands).
The entry action begins with a left parenthesis `(' and
ends with a right parenthesis `)' on an otherwise empty line:
comp.sources. +src/$L/ (
:set cross-post
)
The last entry action can be repeated by specifying an empty set
of parenthesis, e.g.
comp.unix. +unix ()
The entry action of a preceding group in the sequence can be
associated with the current group(s) by specifying the name of the group in
the parentheses instead of the commands, e.g.
comp.unix. +unix (comp.sources.unix)
A macro can also be associated with the entry action by specifying
its number in the same way as the group name above, e.g.
rec.music. +music (30)
Notice that it is the current definition of the macro which
is associated with the group, so if the macro is later redefined with the
`:define' command, it will not have any effect on the entry action.
Group names can be specified using the following notations:
- group.name
- Append the group (if it exists) to the presentation sequence list. If
also-subgroups is set (default), all subscribed subgroups of the
group will be included as well (if there are any). Examples:
"comp", "comp.unix", "comp.unix.questions".
If the group does not exits (e.g. "comp"), the subgroups will be
included even when also-subgroups is not set, i.e. "comp"
is equivalent to "comp.".
- group.name.
- Append the subgroups of the specified group to the presentation sequence.
The group itself (if it exists) is not included. Examples:
"comp.", "comp.unix.".
- .group.name
- Append the groups whose name ends with the specified name to the sequence.
Example: ".test".
- group.name*
- Append the group and its subgroups to the presentation sequence list (even
when also-subgroups is not set). Example:
"comp.unix*".
The following meta notation can be used in a sequence file. The
group.name can be specified using any of the forms described above:
- ! groups
- Completely ignore the group or groups specified unless they are already in
the presentation sequence (i.e. has been explicitly mentioned earlier in
the sequence).
- !:code groups
- Ignore a selection of groups based on the given code letter (see
below), unless they are already included in the sequence. Notice that
these forms only excludes groups from the presentation sequence,
i.e. they do not include the remaining groups at this point; that
must be done explicitly elsewhere.
- !:U groups
- Ignore unsubscribed groups, i.e. if they are neither new, nor present and
subscribed in .newsrc. This is useful to ignore a whole hierarchy except
for a few groups which are explicitly mentioned in .newsrc and still see
new groups as they are created.
- !:X groups
- Ignore unsubscribed and new groups, i.e. if they are not currently
present and subscribed in .newsrc. This is useful to ignore a whole
hierarchy except for a few groups which are explicitly mentioned in
.newsrc. New groups in the hierarchy are ignored unless `NEW' occurs
earlier in the sequence.
- !:O groups
- Ignore old groups, i.e. unless they are new. This is useful to
ignore a whole hierarchy but still see new groups which are created in the
hierarchy (it might become interesting some day). Individual groups can
still be included in the sequence if they are specified before the `!:O'
entry.
- !:N groups
- Ignore new groups in the hierarchy.
- !!
- Stop building the presentation sequence. This eliminates all groups that
are not already in the presentation sequence.
- NEW
- This is a pseudo group name which matches all new groups; you could
place this symbol early in your presentation sequence to see new groups
`out of sequence' (to attract your attention to them).
- RC
- This is a pseudo group name which matches all groups occurring in the
.newsrc file. It will cause the groups in .newsrc to be appended to the
presentation sequence in the sequence in which they are listed in
.newsrc.
- RC:number
- Similar to the RC entry, but limited to the first number
lines of the .newsrc file. Example: RC:10 (use 10 lines of .newsrc).
- RC:string
- Similar to the RC entry, but limited to the lines up to (and
including) the first line (i.e. group) starting with the given
string. For example: RC:alt.sources
- < group.name
- Place the group (and its subgroups) at the beginning of the presentation
sequence. Notice that each `<' entry will place the group(s) at the
beginning of the current sequence, i.e. < A < B < C will generate
the sequence C B A.
- > group.name
- Place the group (and its subgroups) after all other groups that are and
will be entered into the presentation sequence.
- @
- Disable the `!!' command. This can be included in the personal
presentation sequence if the global sequence file contains a !!
entry (see example 1 below).
- % .... %
- Starts and ends a region of the sequence where it is possible to include
groups which has been eliminated earlier. This may be useful to alter the
sequence of some groups, e.g. to place comp.sources.bugs after all other
source groups, the following sequence can be used:
! comp.sources.bugs comp.sources* % comp.sources.bugs %
Example 1: In a company where ordinary users only should
read the local news groups, and ignore the rest (including new news groups
which are otherwise always subscribed to initially), can use the following
global presentation sequence:
general
follow
! local.test
local
!!
The "expert" users in the company must put the @
command somewhere in their private sequence to avoid losing news groups
which they have not explicitly mentioned in their init file.
Example 2: This is the global sequence for systems with
heavy news addicts who setup their own sequences anyway.
# all must read the general news first
< general
# test is test, and junk is junk,
# so it is placed at the very end
> test
> .test
> junk
# this is the standard sequence which everybody may
# change to their own liking
local # our local groups
dk # the Danish groups
eunet.general # to present it before eunet.followup
eunet # the other European groups
comp # the serious groups
news # news on news
sci # other serious groups
rec # not really that important (don't quote me)
misc # well, it must be somewhere
# the groups that are not listed above goes here
Notice the use of comments in the sequence where they are allowed
at the end of non-empty lines as well.
Example 3: My own presentation sequence (in the init file)
simply lists my favourite groups and the corresponding default save
files:
sequence
!:U alt* # ignore unsubscribed alt groups
news.software.nn +nn
comp.sys.ti* +ti/$L
NEW # show new groups here
news*
rec.music.synth +synth/
comp.emacs*,gnu.emacs +emacs/misc
comp.risks +risks
eunet.sources +src/unix/
comp.sources* +src/$L/
The presentation sequence is not used when nn is called
with one or more news group names on the command line; it is thus possible
to read ignored groups (on explicit request) without changing the init file.
(Of course, you can also use the G command to read ignored
groups).
The third example above contains the following line:
comp.emacs*,gnu.emacs +emacs/misc
This is the syntax used to merge groups. When two or more
groups are merged, all new articles in these groups are presented together
as if they were one group. To merge groups, their names must be listed
together in the sequence, and only separated by a single comma. To merge the
groups resulting from a single group pattern (e.g. comp.emacs*), the group
pattern must be followed by a comma and a blank (e.g. comp.emacs*, ...).
Merged groups are presented as the first group in the
"list", and the word "MERGED" will be shown after the
group name. The Y {overview} command will still show merged
groups as individual groups, but they will be annotated with the symbol
`&' on the first of the groups, and a `+' on the rest of the groups.
In the current version, the concept of the current group in
connection with merged groups is a bit fuzzy. This should only be noticeable
with the G command, which will take the most recently used group
among the merged groups as the current group. So things like G = ...
may not always work as expected.
The following environment variables are used by nn:
EDITOR. The editor invoked when editing replies,
follow-ups, and composing mail. nn knows about the following editors:
vi, ded, GNU emacs, and micro-emacs, and will
try to position the cursor on the first line following the header, i.e.
after the blank line which must not be deleted! If an article has been
included, the cursor is placed on the first line of the included text (to
allow you to delete sections easily).
LOGNAME. This is taken as the login name of the current
user. It is used by nn to return failed mail. If it is not defined,
nn will use the value of USER, or if that is not defined either,
nn will use the call `who am i' to get this information. If all
attempts fail, the failed mail is dropped in the bit bucket.
PAGER. This is used as the initial value of the
pager variable.
SHELL. This is the shell which is spawned if the system
cannot suspend nn, and it will be used to execute the shell
escapes.
TERM. The terminal type.
When NNTP is being used over a slow link (as with the
ppp protocol and a modem), it may be desirable to suppress the
retrieval of the information about new newsgroups, and their purpose, since
they can be hundreds of KBytes in size. To do this, the
new-group-action and show-purpose-mode variables should be set
to 0 in your init file. See the descriptions of those variables for
more info.
Unfortunately, the list of active newsgroups is still fetched,
since nn uses it to determine which groups to check for new articles. Even
this could be avoided, but the cost would be checking for new articles in
every group, which might well be slower overall, although startup would be
faster.
~/.newsrc The record of read articles.
~/.nn/select The record of selected and seen articles.
~/.nn/init Personal configuration and presentation sequence.
~/.nn/kill The automatic kills and selections.
~/.nn/KILL.COMP The compiled kill file.
~/.nn/LAST The time stamp of the last new news group we have seen.
~/.nn/NEXTG Active group last time nn was quit.
~/.nn/.param Parameter file for the aux script
$lib/setup System-wide setup - always read first.
$lib/init System-wide setup and presentation sequence.
$lib/aux The response edit and send script.
$lib/routes Mapping rules for mail addresses (on non-domain systems).
$db/* The news data base.
/etc/termcap Terminal data base [BSD].
/usr/lib/terminfo/* Terminal data base [SysV].
/usr/local/lib/nntp_server Name of remote nntp server, if not changed by
setting the environment variable NNTPSERVER or the nntp-server
variable on the command line.
The name $lib and $db are the directories used for the auxiliary
files and the news data base respectively. Their name and location is
defined at compile time. Common choices are /usr/local/lib/nn or
/usr/lib/news/nn for $lib and /usr/spool/nn or /usr/spool/news/.nn for
$db.
Kim F. Storm, Texas Instruments A/S, Denmark
Michael T Pins mtpins@nndev.org
The NNTP support was designed and implemented by Rene Seindal,
Institute of Datalogy, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
The news.software.nn group is used for discussion on all subjects
related to the nn news reader. This includes, but is not limited to,
questions, answers, ideas, hints, information from the development group,
patches, etc.