If -inplace is given, each digest is replaced by the ``table of contents'' for the digest (the original digest is removed). Burst then renumbers all of the messages following the digest in the folder to make room for each of the messages contained within the digest. These messages are placed immediately after the digest.
If -noinplace is given, each digest is preserved, no table of contents is produced, and the messages contained within the digest are placed at the end of the folder. Other messages are not tampered with in any way.
The -quiet switch directs burst to be silent about reporting messages that are not in digest format.
The -verbose switch directs burst to tell the user the general actions that it is taking to explode the digest.
It turns out that burst works equally well on forwarded messages and blind-carbon-copies as on Internet digests, provided that the former two were generated by forw or send.
^$HOME/.mh_profile~^The user profile
^Path:~^To determine the user's nmh directory ^Current-Folder:~^To find the default current folder ^Msg-Protect:~^To set mode when creating a new message
`+folder' defaults to the current folder `msgs' defaults to cur `-noinplace' `-noquiet' `-noverbose'
Although burst uses a sophisticated algorithm to determine where one encapsulated message ends and another begins, not all digestifying programs use an encapsulation algorithm. In degenerate cases, this usually results in burst finding an encapsulation boundary prematurely and splitting a single encapsulated message into two or more messages. These erroneous digestifying programs should be fixed.
Furthermore, any text which appears after the last encapsulated message is not placed in a separate message by burst. In the case of digestified messages, this text is usually an ``End of digest'' string. As a result of this possibly un-friendly behavior on the part of burst, note that when the -inplace option is used, this trailing information is lost. In practice, this is not a problem since correspondents usually place remarks in text prior to the first encapsulated message, and this information is not lost.