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GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

RedHat 6.2

(Zoot)

whatnow(1)


WHATNOW

WHATNOW

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
FILES
PROFILE COMPONENTS
SEE ALSO
DEFAULTS
CONTEXT
BUGS

NAME

whatnow − prompting front-end for sending messages

SYNOPSIS

whatnow [−draftfolder +folder] [−draftmessage msg]
[−nodraftfolder] [−editor editor] [−noedit]
[−prompt string] [file] [−version] [−help]

DESCRIPTION

Whatnow is the default program that queries the user about the disposition of a composed draft. It is normally automatically invoked by one of the nmh commands comp, dist, forw, or repl after the initial edit.

When started, the editor is started on the draft (unless ’−noedit’ is given, in which case the initial edit is suppressed). Then, whatnow repetitively prompts the user with “What now?” and awaits a response. The valid responses are:

edit re−edit using the same editor that was used on the
preceding round unless a profile entry
“<lasteditor>−next: <editor>” names an alternate editor
edit <editor>
invoke <editor> for further editing
refile +folder
refile the draft into the given folder
mime
process the draft as MIME composition file using
the "buildmimeproc" command (mhbuild by default)
display
list the message being distributed/replied−to
on the terminal
list
list the draft on the terminal
send
send the message
send −watch
send the message and monitor the delivery process
push
send the message in the background
whom
list the addresses that the message will go to
whom −check
list the addresses and verify that they are
acceptable to the transport service
quit
preserve the draft and exit
quit −delete
delete the draft and exit
delete
delete the draft and exit

When entering your response, you need only type enough characters to uniquely identify the response.

For the edit response, any valid switch to the editor is valid.

For the send and push responses, any valid switch to send (1) are valid (as push merely invokes send with the ’−push’ option).

For the whom response, any valid switch to whom (1) is valid.

For the refile response, any valid switch to the fileproc is valid.

For the display and list responses, any valid argument to the lproc is valid. If any non−switch arguments are present, then the pathname of the draft will be excluded from the argument list given to the lproc (this is useful for listing another nmh message).

See mh−profile (5) for further information about how editors are used by nmh. It also discusses how environment variables can be used to direct whatnow’s actions in complex ways.

The ’−prompt string’ switch sets the prompting string for whatnow.

The ’−draftfolder +folder’ and ’−draftmessage msg’ switches invoke the nmh draft folder facility. This is an advanced (and highly useful) feature. Consult the mh-draft(5) man page for more information.

FILES

$HOME/.mh_profile The user profile
<mh−dir>/draft The draft file

PROFILE COMPONENTS

Path: To determine the user’s nmh directory
Draft−Folder: To find the default draft−folder
Editor: To override the default editor
<lasteditor>−next: To name an editor to be used after exit
from <lasteditor>
automimeproc: If value is 1, and the draft is a MIME
composition file, then automatically call
buildmimeproc prior to sending.
buildmimeproc: Program to translate MIME composition files
fileproc: Program to refile the message
lproc: Program to list the contents of a message
sendproc: Program to use to send the message
whomproc: Program to determine who a message would go to

SEE ALSO

send(1), whom(1)

DEFAULTS

’−prompt “What Now? ”’

CONTEXT

None

BUGS

The argument to the ’−prompt’ switch must be interpreted as a single token by the shell that invokes whatnow. Therefore, one must usually place the argument to this switch inside double−quotes.

If the initial edit fails, whatnow deletes your draft (by renaming it with a leading comma); failure of a later edit preserves the draft.

If the buildmimeproc fails (returns a nonzero status), whatnow simply prints a “What now?” prompt. whatnow depends on the buildmimeproc to tell the user that something went wrong.

If whatnowproc is whatnow, then comp, dist, forw, and repl use a built−in whatnow, and do not actually run the whatnow program. Hence, if you define your own whatnowproc, don’t call it whatnow since it won’t be run.

If sendproc is send, then whatnow uses a built−in send, it does not actually run the send program. Hence, if you define your own sendproc, don’t call it send since whatnow won’t run it.



whatnow(1)