Tassilo Horn <[email protected]> writes: > "Loris Bennett" <[email protected]> writes: > >> [mail] >> [general] >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:INBOX >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:sent >> [work] >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:this >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:that >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:theother >> [private] >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:friends >> nnimap+mail.my.provider.com:family >> [news] >> ... >> >> If I use G G on a topic to search for a message and get several >> results, is there a way to find out which folder each message found is >> in? > > I think, there's no way to see that information from the nnir search > results summary. But you can "warp" to any article found in its > originating group: > > ,----[ (info "(gnus)Basic Usage") ] > | The `nnir' group made in this way is an `ephemeral' group, and some > | changes are not permanent: aside from reading, moving, and deleting, > | you can't act on the original article. But there is an alternative: you > | can _warp_ to the original group for the article on the current line > | with `A W', aka `gnus-warp-to-article'. Even better, the function > | `gnus-summary-refer-thread', bound by default in summary buffers to `A > | T', will first warp to the original group before it works its magic and > | includes all the articles in the thread. From here you can read, move > | and delete articles, but also copy them, alter article marks, whatever. > | Go nuts. > `---- > > Bye, > Tassilo
Thanks for the hint (why didn't I think of googling for 'warp'?), but I don't get it. What is supposed to happen? Using the bindings or calling the functions explicitly doesn't seem to do anything. Cheers Loris -- no sig is good sig _______________________________________________ info-gnus-english mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english
