Chapter Introduction (Making MH Work Your Way)
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Whether you use MH or a front-end like xmh, some part of it might not work
exactly the way you want it to.
For a lot of the work, you don't have to be a programmer -- just follow the
instructions here.
Usually, you'll be making a change to your MH profile.
This chapter and the Chapter
New Versions of MH Commands
show you how to extend MH itself.
The Chapter
Introduction to UNIX Programming with MH
has tips for writing
programs that build completely new functionality around MH.
Later parts of the books have chapters that explain how to customize
front ends (xmh, exmh, and mh-e),
but the information in these
earlier chapters will help you adapt the parts of MH that front ends use.
This chapter starts with overall information about how MH commands work.
You'll see how to use different MH directories -- including other users'.
You'll read about how draft messages are built.
Here are some ways to customize MH and, for example, xmh:
-
Make your default mail header just the way you want, so you don't have to
make the same changes to the header by hand each time.
-
Set default options in the MH profile.
-
Rename, move, or "hide" your MH directory almost anywhere.
-
Customize MIME message handling.
-
For users of front-ends like mh-e, here's information about the MH commands that
your interface runs and how you can change what those commands do.
Up to now, this book has covered switches for specific MH commands.
There are other overall configuration entries you can put in your MH profile.
Many of these affect both MH and front-ends.
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