Forwarding Messages: forw
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If you need to send a copy of a mail message to someone, you can forward it.
To forward the current message, just type:
% forw
To forward other messages, use the message numbers too.
For example, to forward messages 3 and 5:
% forw 3 5
To: somebody
cc: somebodyelse
Subject: Messages I got about meeting tomorrow
-------
----- Enter initial text
Dear somebody, here's some mail I got. I think you might
want a copy of these. The second message is the most
important, blah blah blah...
^D
----- Forwarded messages
...Contents of message 3 here...
----- Message 2
...Contents of message 5 here...
----- End of Forwarded Messages
What now? push
%
Before it copies the messages you're forwarding, forw will prompt you
on the screen (this doesn't go into the message)
to enter any text ("initial text") you want to send along.
(Note that, although this is what seems to be happening,
there's more going on "behind the scenes.")
You can type initial text here and then press
CTRL-D
at the start of a new line.
Or, type
CTRL-D
right away to go straight to the What now?
prompt, where you'll have the usual choices.
On the other hand, if you want to add a note after
the forwarded messages or edit the
forwarded messages themselves, use the
edit command to go into the draft message with your favorite editor.
You can also configure MH to let you put the note after the forwarded
messages without going into an editor by using the
prompter -noprepend switch.
The previous example showed a new way to send a message:
the push command.
The message is sent "in the background."
On computers where send is slow, push gives you
another prompt right away; you can do something else while
MH is sending the message.
That has a lot of advantages, but a few disadvantages.
The Section push (or p) is
worth reading before you use push again.
As most MH commands do, forw has several other features.
Like repl, you can annotate the messages you forward (with
-annotate.
You can also
reformat the forwarded messages
to delete useless fields in the header or neaten the body.
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