Emanuel Berg <embe8...@student.uu.se> writes: >>> [Quoted text removed due to X-No-Archive]
> What does this mean? It means that the article I was (not) quoting from had the X-No-Archive header set, which indicates that the author doesn't want his words archived - quoting them would go against that wish, so Gnus has functionality to avoid doing that. [The variable message-cite-articles-with-x-no-archive] > Perhaps Mr. Sjøgren has that as `nil'? Indeed, I have. > If so, why? Because I want to respect the wishes of the people I respond to. Also, I think setting X-No-Archive is kind of silly, if not asocial. This functionality helps to showcase that. > But even more so, why does the OP have X-No-Archive set? The header does not indicate motive ;-) > What kind of prefix is "X"? It is the standard "this-is-not-a-standard-header-yet"-prefix. It is common in formats that employ headers. In some environments the use of "X-" for non-standardized headers has been deprecated, as I understand it, but there are a number of de facto standard X-headers. Best regards, Adam -- "I wouldn't even think about playing music if I was Adam Sjøgren born in these times ..." a...@koldfront.dk _______________________________________________ info-gnus-english mailing list info-gnus-english@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english