Lines Matching full:your
45 which will print a line of dashes, the recipients of your message, and
51 ~ escape without killing your letter.
60 your satisfaction, write it out and quit the editor.
67 after which you may continue typing text which will be appended to your
84 editor, on your current message, you can use the escape,
96 file in your message; the escape
101 to your current message.
105 characters appended to your message is printed, after which you may continue
107 which are expanded according to the conventions of your shell.
115 in your home directory. This is often useful since
118 of your message there when you abort a message with \s-2RUBOUT\s0.
120 To save the current text of your message on a file you may use the
127 to the file, after which you may continue appending text to your message.
129 with the conventions of your shell.
154 If you wish, you can associate a subject with your message by using the
203 recipients. You can also use your erase character to erase back into
204 the list of recipients, or your kill character to erase them altogether.
205 Thus, for example, if your erase and kill characters are the standard
227 leaves you appending text to the end of your message. You can use
238 your message. If you wish, instead, to filter the body of your
243 which pipes your message through the command and uses the output
244 as the new text of your message. If the command produces no output,
247 of your message. A frequently-used filter is the command
273 in your home directory.
307 on your machine. If your machine is directly (or sometimes, even,
324 If your recipient logs in on a machine connected to yours by
327 You must know the list of machines through which your message must
338 If your message must go through an intermediary machine first, you
345 decide to write it down for convenience). Talk to your system administrator
382 your current directory (ie, one for which a `/' would not usually
391 of the folder name in your folder directory.