Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.
A header field in the mail buffer starts with a field name at the
beginning of a line, terminated by a colon. Upper and lower case are
equivalent in field names (and in mailing addresses also). After the
colon and optional whitespace comes the contents of the field.
You can use any name you like for a header field, but normally people
use only standard field names with accepted meanings. Here is a table
of fields commonly used in outgoing messages.
- `To'
-
This field contains the mailing addresses to which the message is
addressed.
- `Subject'
-
The contents of the `Subject' field should be a piece of text
that says what the message is about. The reason `Subject' fields
are useful is that most mail-reading programs can provide a summary of
messages, listing the subject of each message but not its text.
- `CC'
-
This field contains additional mailing addresses to send the message
to, but whose readers should not regard the message as addressed to
them.
- `BCC'
-
This field contains additional mailing addresses to send the message to,
which should not appear in the header of the message actually sent.
Copies sent this way are called blind carbon copies.
To send a blind carbon copy of every outgoing message to yourself, set
the variable
mail-self-blind
to t
.
- `FCC'
-
This field contains the name of one file and directs Emacs to append a
copy of the message to that file when you send the message. If the file
is in Rmail format, Emacs writes the message to Rmail format; otherwise,
Emacs writes the message in system mail file format.
To put a fixed file name as in `FCC' field each time you start
editing an outgoing message, set the variable
mail-archive-file-name
to that file name. Unless you remove the
`FCC' field before sending, the message will be written into that
file when it is sent.
- `From'
-
Use the `From' field to say who you are, when the account you are
using to send the mail is not your own. The contents of the `From'
field should be a valid mailing address, since replies will normally go
there. If you don't specify the `From' field yourself, Emacs uses
the value of
user-mail-address
as the default.
- `Reply-to'
-
Use this field to direct replies to a different address. Most
mail-reading programs (including Rmail) automatically send replies to
the `Reply-to' address in preference to the `From' address.
By adding a `Reply-to' field to your header, you can work around
any problems your `From' address may cause for replies.
To put a fixed `Reply-to' address into every outgoing message, set
the variable
mail-default-reply-to
to that address (as a string).
Then mail
initializes the message with a `Reply-to' field as
specified. You can delete or alter that header field before you send
the message, if you wish. When Emacs starts up, if the environment
variable REPLYTO
is set, mail-default-reply-to
is
initialized from that environment variable.
- `In-reply-to'
-
This field contains a piece of text describing a message you are
replying to. Some mail systems can use this information to correlate
related pieces of mail. Normally this field is filled in by Rmail
when you reply to a message in Rmail, and you never need to
think about it (see section Reading Mail with Rmail).
The `To', `CC', `BCC' and `FCC' fields can appear
any number of times, to specify many places to send the message. The
`To', `CC', and `BCC' fields can have continuation lines.
All the lines starting with whitespace, following the line on which the
field starts, are considered part of the field. For example,
To: foo@here.net, this@there.net,
me@gnu.cambridge.mass.usa.earth.spiral3281
When you send the message, if you didn't write a `From' field
yourself, Emacs puts in one for you. The variable
mail-from-style
controls the format:
nil
-
Just the email address, as in `king@grassland.com'.
parens
-
Both email address and full name, as in `king@grassland.com (Elvis
Parsley)'.
angles
-
Both email address and full name, as in `Elvis Parsley
<king@grassland.com>'.
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.