rn macros (long)

Lewis W Kellum lwk at caen.engin.umich.edu
Sat Aug 26 14:00:00 AEST 1989


You can all breath now. After promising to collect and repost
peoples favorite rn macros many moons ago, I've finally done it.
 
Thanks to all who contributed! You are listed with your submissions
In case of duplicate submissions, I have only given credit to the 
first submitter.

I've successfully tried out the more complicated macros here, but rn
acts somewhat funny when they're *all* loaded. In many cases I've 
changed the key associated with a macro from what the author submitted
so I didn't have to worry about overlaps - mostly by adding a leading ':'.

There are also some  RNINIT file lines at the end as well.
Follow ups to news.software.b. 

                - Woody Kellum  lwk at caen.engin.umich.edu
  
----- CUT------- SNIP------HACK----------CHOP-----KARATE-------
# .rnmac file

# Save files in mh folder named for group
# This one came from the net sometime back.
# Don't remember who, though.

:mh  |/usr/new/lib/mh/rcvstore +.%C^J

#This is half-page-up, the same as 'u' on 'more' and 'less'; I got pissed
#when I was unsubscribed whenever I wanted to move back a little, forgetting
#that the rn pager was *not* the same as 'more'!  One drawback: 'u' is
#still 'unsubscribe' at ends of articles and between groups.
# Amos Shapir	amos at nsc.com
u %(%m=p?bd:u)

#This runs 'cn' - a command file that takes rn -s# -c and formats it by awk.
#(I have found no way to run this from the middle of an rn session).
# > rn -s15 -c | awk '$1 ~ /Unread/ { printf "%s\t%s\n", $5,$4 }'
#  Amos Shapir	amos at nsc.com
:cn !cn^J

#Junk-and-quit - when you want to just look at a few articles
#on each group.
#  Amos Shapir	amos at nsc.com
J jq 

# Save sources to a directory <news_group_name> in file <subject_line>
# be sure to edit the subject line! 
#
# This is one of mine.  -ed.
:w w ~/src/%C/%s 

# junk next article 
# Jef Poskanzer <jef at helios.ee.lbl.gov>
C	/./:j^J

# map the right bracket into the control-G because bracket is easier to type
# dave at Galaxia.Newport.RI.US (David H. Brierley)
] %(%m=p?^G:])

# kill all articles in the current group that were submitted by the author
# of the current article. 
# 
# kill da sucka! -Ed.
# dave at Galaxia.Newport.RI.US (David H. Brierley)
:t %(%m=[ap]?/%t/h\:j^J:t)

#	For large groups with many uninteresting (at least to me) articles.
#	It deletes everything upto and including the current article.
#	The idea is the following.  You walk through the pages of
#	subjectlines until you see an interesting article, say number 789.
#	then type 788, and z (zap).  Anything before 789 (from which you
#	have seen the subjectlines is junked and 789 is shown.  The point is
#	that any time you hit "=", rn shows you the subjectlines from the
#	start on.  This "refreshes" your overview.
#	Drawback: be careful if you use ^N search.  If you hit z at the
#	wrong time, it might junk articles from which you haven't seen the
#	subjectlines yet.
#
# wsinkees%tuewsd.uucp at nluug.nl (Kees Huizing)
:z ?.?j\n 

#	When you choose to read a newsgroup, it first shows the
#	subjectlines.  I don't like this "jumping in" nature of rn.
#
# wsinkees%tuewsd.uucp at nluug.nl (Kees Huizing)
y %(%m=n?=:)
\040 %(%m=n?=: ) 

#	This one doesn't work.  It should recover a subject, i.e. unjunk all
#	previous articles with the same subject.  The main problem of
#	reading news is not to drawn in the number of articles.  So I
#	learned to junk, zap (see above) and catch up (c) very easily.
#	Sometimes you change your mind (Hey, John McEnroe also writes on
#	this subject, perhaps it's more interesting than I thought).
#	Typing the sequence works, but apparently, the escape-s is not
#	expanded when you use it as a macro
#
# I fixed this -Ed.
# wsinkees%tuewsd.uucp at nluug.nl (Kees Huizing)
:U ?%s?r:M

#The following were submitted by Mark Brader <msb at sq.sq.com> 

# Change the "f", etc commands so they mark the message as read.  If I'm f'ing
# before I've gotten to the end of the article, it's because I already
# read it once and then M'd it.  Idea from Larry Wall when rn was new.
f	jf
F	jF
r	jr
R	jR
#Make / mean g when within an article, to agree with "more".  (This is
#one part that Berkeley got right.)  To get the regular behavior of /
#when within an article I have to type j/, but I can stand that.
/	%(%m=p?g:/) 

# Like c, but clears all cross-postings as well.
Jy	$?.?j^Jq
 
#To agree with real UNIX conventions on end-of-file.  Note that QQ is
#faster than qqq because it doesn't waste time finding the next news-
#group with news in it, if I'm in a newsgroup when I do .D.
^D	QQ
 
# Mail article to a friend or anyone 
:D^J	!nice -6 mail -s "n %C '%i' # sq: %a" friend at wherever >/dev/null &^J
:D^M	!nice -6 mail -s "n %C '%i' # sq: %a" friend at wherever >/dev/null &^J
:D@	!nice -6 mail -s "n %C '%i' # sq: %a # 

# Like K, except that the subject as placed in the KILL file is not
# preceded by ": *" and is not truncated to about 20 characters.  This
# macro does not work if the subject contains certain characters e.g. '.
KK	!(md %c; echo '/%s/:j' >>%c/KILL) &^J

# Like the preceding macro, except that what is placed in the KILL file
# is :=:j instead of :j on the subject.  This means that when the
# killing is going on, the full subject line will be displayed, so
# that you can see if you got a false hit.  The idea of using :=:j
# came from the net a few months ago; I don't remember who posted it.
K=	!(md %c; echo '/%s/:=:j' >>%c/KILL) &^J

# Lets me type a KILL file entry directly, without having to enter the
# editor as I would with ^K.
K:	!md %c; echo >>%c/KILL '/

# Removes the THRU line from the KILL file, so that if I then do Q
# and reenter the group, newly added KILL file entries will take effect.
K*	!(echo 'g/\\\^THRU/d'; echo w) | ed %c/KILL &^J
# REAL kill command
K^M	K
K^J	K
----- CUT------- SNIP------HACK----------CHOP-----KARATE-------
 
#--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# RININT file 
#--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#These go in your RNINIT file

# This gives you a more useful list of a newsgroup's
#contents. It's not mine, I stole it from somewhere???
#When you press the '=' key, the list generated is in this format...

#11234 Re: Some subject                                  ( 67) larry at focsys
#11235 Re: Some other bloody subject                     (  7) larry at focsys
#11236 Re: No subject                                    (117) larry at focsys
# 
# Purported to have come from Sweden. I like this one! -Ed.
#Larry Williamson  watmath!focsys!larry 
#with modifications by Mark Brader <msb at sq.sq.com>

-ESUBJLINE="\
 %(%[subject]                                             \
 =^\\(..............................................\\)?\
 %1:%[subject]) \
 %(%(%[lines]=^$?%z:  (%[lines]\\))= *\\(.....\\)$\\|\\(.*\\)?%0) \
 %(%(%f=(\\(.*[^ ].*\\))$?%1:%f)                   \
 =^\\(...................\\)?%1)"

#If you have a problem  saving messages to:

#	~/News/comp.unix.questions

#because of a 14 character filename limit,  save them to:

#	~/News/Comp/unix.questions

#Do this by placing:

-ESAVENAME="%`%X/savename %^C`"

#in $LIBDIR/rn/INIT, and my $LIBDIR/rn/savename script says:
#
#	:
#	# convert "Comp.lang.c" to "Comp/lang.c"
#	if [ $# -ne 1 ] ; then
#	    echo "usage: $0 Newsgroup" 1>&2
#	    exit 1
#	fi
#	echo "$1" | sed -e 's!\.!/!'
#	exit 0
#
#Chip Rosenthal / chip at vector.Dallas.TX.US 
----- CUT------- SNIP------HACK----------CHOP-----KARATE-------



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