From f5f3a1af3c5e55dbbd3f45e80c54e9e65370fd77 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: William Morgan Date: Thu, 9 Apr 2009 15:28:26 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] update NewUserGuide.txt with new keymappings --- doc/NewUserGuide.txt | 11 +++++------ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/NewUserGuide.txt b/doc/NewUserGuide.txt index e4d49ee..5f9c3ba 100644 --- a/doc/NewUserGuide.txt +++ b/doc/NewUserGuide.txt @@ -98,9 +98,9 @@ press 'n' and 'p' to jump forward and backward between open messages, aligning the display as necessary. Now press 'x' to kill the thread view buffer. You should see the inbox -again. If you don't, you can cycle through the buffers by pressing -'b', or you can press 'B' to see a list of all buffers and simply -select the inbox. +again. If you don't, you can cycle through the buffers by pressing 'b' +and 'B' (forwards and backwards, respectively), or you can press ';' to +see a list of all buffers and simply select the inbox. There are many operations you can perform on threads beyond viewing them. To archive a thread, press 'a'. The thread will disappear from @@ -125,8 +125,8 @@ in the labels as a sequence of space-separated words. To cancel the input, press Ctrl-G. Many of these operations can be applied to a group of threads. Press -'t' to tag a thread. Tag a couple, then press ';' to apply the next -command to the set of threads. ';t', of course, will untag all tagged +'t' to tag a thread. Tag a couple, then press '+' to apply the next +command to the set of threads. '+t', of course, will untag all tagged messages. Ok, let's try using labels and search. Press 'L' to do a quick label @@ -245,7 +245,6 @@ Here's what I recommend: inbox, and you can browse the mailing list traffic at any point by searching for that label. - Appendix C: Reading blogs with Sup ---------------------------------- -- 2.45.2