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Table of Contents
1. Preliminary remarks
2. It’s so easy to begin to use emacs-w3m
2.1 What version of Emacs can be used?
2.2 Using w3m: the reason why emacs-w3m is fast
2.3 Things required to run emacs-w3m
2.4 Installing emacs-w3m
2.5 Installing on non-UNIX-like systems
2.6 Minimal settings to run emacs-w3m
3. Basic usage
3.1 Let’s go netsurfing!
3.1.1 There are two types of the key bindings
3.1.2 Go ahead, just try it
3.1.3 Moving from place to place in a page
3.1.4 Moving from page to page
3.1.5 Surfing using the mouse
3.1.6 Return to an Ordinary Life
3.2 Toggle displaying inline images
3.3 Going back through time and space
3.4 That’s a favorite with me!
3.4.1 Adding a URL to your favorites
3.4.2 Browse your bookmarks
3.4.3 How to change your bookmarks
3.5 Everybody likes tabs
3.6 Creating, killing and moving across buffers
3.6.1 Creating and killing buffers
3.6.2 Moving across buffers
3.6.3 Selecting buffers from a list
3.7 Downloading a file
3.8 Filling in HTML forms
3.9 Support for web page editing and hacking
4. Pretty good features
4.1 Convenient ways to search the web
4.1.1 How to search with emacs-w3m
4.1.2 An alternative (and fast) way to search the web
4.1.3 Using your favorite engines
4.2 Visiting several web pages in one URL
4.3 It will be fine tomorrow
4.4 Raise your antenna
4.4.1 How to add your web sites to Antenna
4.4.2 Tracking changes with Antenna
4.5 Showing the tree structure of local directories
4.6 Viewing perl documents
4.7 Searching files with Namazu
4.8 Viewing data in various octal form
4.9 Grouping sessions into separate frames
4.10 Saving and loading sessions
5. Customizable variables
5.1 General variables
5.2 Variables related to images
5.3 Variables related to forms
5.4 Variables related to cookies
5.5 Variables related to bookmarks
5.6 Variables related to searching the web
5.7 Variables related to weather information
5.8 Variables related to the dtree feature
5.9 Variables related to antenna
5.10 Variables related to perldoc
5.11 Variables related to namazu
5.12 Variables related to the octet feature
5.13 Variables related to session manager
5.14 Hooks
5.15 Other variables
6. Hooking emacs-w3m into mail/newsreaders
6.1 Reading HTML mails in Gnus
6.2 Reading HTML mails in Mew
6.3 Reading HTML mails in
SEMI
MUAs
6.4 VM (vieW maiL) is not Wanderlust
7. There isn’t always an answer
7.1 General Questions
7.2 Troubleshooting
7.3 Questions of Shimbun Library
8. You can surely solve it
9. A tool for reading a newspaper
9.1 Turning Gnus into a web browser!
9.2 Reading web newspapers with Mew
9.3 Reading web newspapers with Wanderlust
9.4 Using a shell script to fetch shimbun feeds
9.5 Sites supported by Shimbun
9.5.1 Newspapers Supported by Shimbun
9.5.2 News Sites Supported by Shimbun
9.5.3 Mailing Lists Supported by Shimbun
9.5.4 Sport Sites Supported by Shimbun
9.5.5 Misc Sites Supported by Shimbun
9.6 How to make a new shimbun module
9.6.1 Overview
9.6.2 Getting web page and header information
9.6.3 Displaying an article
9.6.4 Inheriting shimbun module
9.6.5 Making text/plain articles
9.6.6 Zenkaku to hankaku conversion
9.6.7 Coding convention of Shimbun
10. Some knick-knacks using emacs-w3m
11. Mailing list and submitting bug reports
12. Details of some emacs-w3m functions
13. Companion packages you might need
14. People who wrote this manual
Index
Concept Index
Key Index
Variable Index
Function Index
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This document was generated by
TSUCHIYA Masatoshi
on
January 30, 2019
using
texi2html 1.82
.