xenial (1) scan.1mh.gz

Provided by: nmh_1.6-8build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       scan - produce a one line per message scan listing

SYNOPSIS

       scan [+folder] [msgs] [-clear | -noclear] [-form formatfile] [-format string] [-header | -noheader]
            [-width columns] [-reverse | -noreverse] [-file filename] [-version] [-help]

DESCRIPTION

       Scan produces a one-line-per-message listing of  the  specified  folder  or  messages.   Each  scan  line
       contains  the  message  number  (name),  the  date,  the “From:” field, the “Subject” field, and, if room
       allows, some of the body of the message.  For example:

            15+  10/05 crocker    nned  <<Last week I asked some of
            16-  10/05 crocker    message id format  <<I recommend
            18   10/06 brien      Re: Exit status from mkdir
            19   10/07*brien      “scan” listing format in nmh

       The `+' on message 15 indicates that it is the current message.

       The `-' on message 16 indicates that it has been replied to,  as  indicated  by  a  “Replied:”  component
       (produced by the -annotate switch to the repl command).

       The `*' on message 19 indicates that no “Date:” header was present.  The time of last modification of the
       message is given instead.

       If there is sufficient room left on the scan line after the subject, the line will be  filled  with  text
       from the body, preceded by “<<”, and terminated by “>>” if the body is sufficiently short.  Scan actually
       reads each of the specified messages and parses them to extract  the  desired  fields.   During  parsing,
       appropriate error messages will be produced if there are format errors in any of the messages.

       By  default,  scan  will  decode  RFC 2047 (MIME) encoding in these scan listings.  Scan will only decode
       these fields if your terminal can natively display the character set used in the  encoding.   You  should
       set  the appropriate locale(1) environment variables to your native character set, if it is not US-ASCII.
       See locale(1) for more details on the appropriate environment variables.

       The switch -reverse, makes scan list the messages in reverse order.

       The -file filename switch allows the user to obtain a scan listing of a  maildrop  file  as  produced  by
       packf.  This listing includes every message in the file (you can't scan individual messages).  The switch
       -reverse is ignored with this option.

       The switch -width columns may be used to specify the width of the scan line.  The default is to  use  the
       width of the terminal.

       The  -header  switch produces a header line prior to the scan listing.  Currently, the name of the folder
       and the current date and time are output (see the HISTORY section for more information).

       If the -clear switch is used and scan's output is directed to a terminal,  then  scan  will  consult  the
       environment  variables  $TERM  and  $TERMCAP  to determine your terminal type in order to find out how to
       clear the screen prior to exiting.  If the -clear switch is used and scan's output is not directed  to  a
       terminal (e.g., a pipe or a file), then scan will send a formfeed prior to exiting.

       For example, the command:

            (scan -clear -header; show all -show pr -f) | lpr

       produces a scan listing of the current folder, followed by a formfeed, followed by a formatted listing of
       all messages in the folder, one  per  page.   Omitting  “-show pr -f”  will  cause  the  messages  to  be
       concatenated, separated by a one-line header and two blank lines.

       To  override  the  output  format used by scan, the -format string or -form file switches are used.  This
       permits individual fields of the scan listing to be extracted with ease.  The string is simply  a  format
       string and the file is simply a format file.  See mh-format(5) for the details.

       In addition to the standard mh-format(5) escapes, scan also recognizes the following additional component
       escapes:

            Escape    Returns  Description
            body      string   the (compressed) first part of the body
            dtimenow  date     the current date
            folder    string   the name of the current folder

       If no date header is present in the message, the function escapes which operate  on  {date}  will  return
       values  for the date of last modification of the message file itself.  This feature is handy for scanning
       a draft folder, as message drafts usually aren't allowed to have dates in them.

       The /etc/nmh directory contains several format files as examples of customized scan output.

       scan will update the nmh context prior to starting the listing,  so  interrupting  a  long  scan  listing
       preserves the new context.  nmh purists hate this idea.

FILES

       $HOME/.mh_profile          The user profile

PROFILE COMPONENTS

       Path:                To determine the user's nmh directory
       Alternate-Mailboxes: To determine the user's mailboxes
       Current-Folder:      To find the default current folder

SEE ALSO

       pick(1), show(1), mh-format(5)

DEFAULTS

       `+folder' defaults to the current folder
       `msgs' defaults to all
       `-format' defaulted as described above
       `-noheader'
       `-width' defaulted to the width of the terminal

CONTEXT

       If a folder is given, it will become the current folder.

HISTORY

       Prior to using the format string mechanism, -header used to generate a heading saying what each column in
       the listing was.  Format strings prevent this from happening.

BUGS

       The value of each component escape is set by scan to the  contents  of  the  first  message  header  scan
       encounters  with the corresponding component name; any following headers with the same component name are
       ignored.