From 5dc2cf5b64bae752d133657ceef1615959538e35 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tassilo Horn Date: Fri, 7 Nov 2014 08:58:14 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Add link to EWW manual. --- texi/ChangeLog | 1 + texi/gnus.texi | 5 +++-- 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/texi/ChangeLog b/texi/ChangeLog index 7e6748457..17ae9443b 100644 --- a/texi/ChangeLog +++ b/texi/ChangeLog @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ 2014-11-07 Tassilo Horn * gnus.texi (HTML): Update section so that it mentions shr and w3m. + Also link the full EWW manual that explains more on shr, too. * gnus-faq.texi (FAQ 4 - Reading messages, FAQ 4-16): Add Q&A on how to increase contrast when displaying HTML mail with shr. diff --git a/texi/gnus.texi b/texi/gnus.texi index a54cdfd9e..09c9713b4 100644 --- a/texi/gnus.texi +++ b/texi/gnus.texi @@ -11766,11 +11766,12 @@ article buffer. There are many methods for doing that, but two of them are kind of default methods. If your Emacs copy has been built with libxml2 support, then Gnus uses -its built-in, plain elisp Simple HTML Renderer (@code{shr}). +Emacs' built-in, plain elisp Simple HTML Renderer @code{shr} @footnote{@code{shr} displays colors as declared in the @acronym{HTML} article but tries to adjust them in order to be readable. If you prefer more contrast, have a look at question 4.16 in the -@xref{Frequently Asked Questions}.} +@xref{Frequently Asked Questions}.} which is also used by Emacs' +browser EWW (@xref{Top,,,eww}). If your Emacs copy lacks libxml2 support but you have @code{w3m} installed on your system, Gnus uses that to render @acronym{HTML} mail -- 2.25.1