gfp <[email protected]> writes:
>>
>> See also the section "Mail Aliases" in the "Sending Mail"
>> chapter of the Emacs user manual by evaluating the following
>> expression in Emacs:
>>
>> (info "(emacs) Mail Aliases")
>>
>> Note that these aliases are different from your use of the
>> term, but you could, for example, have:
>>
>> alias at [email protected]
>> alias de [email protected]
>>
>> or whatever you find easy to remember.
>>
> opening
> Gnus Posting Styles: (see screenshot)
>
> should I enter after "Value Menu Regexp:
>
> [email protected] ?
>
> would this help?
>
>
> in the manual:
>
> (info "(emacs) Mail Aliases")
>
> there it says about a file:
>
> To define an alias in ‘~/.mailrc’, write a line like this:
>
> I don´t have that file "mailrc"
> it does not exist.
Note that the file name is ".mailrc" rather than "mailrc".
The leading period, ".", is required in the file name.
You can create the text file ".mailrc" using Emacs.
1. Type C-x C-f
2. At the "Find file: " prompt, type the location of the
file followed by its name. In this case, the location
is ~/ and the file name is .mailrc:
Find file: ~/.mailrc
After entering the file’s location and name, press your
keyboard’s Enter/Return key (usually described in Emacs’s
sources and documentation as RET).
3. Emacs will then create a buffer that is named after the
file. Enter your alias definitions, one per line, into the
buffer and save the buffer (type C-x C-s) to the file.
In addition to aliases for your email addresses, you
can add aliases for email addresses to which you send
email.
--
The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.
- Geoffrey Chaucer, The Parliament of Birds.