useful ones:
@table @asis
-@keycmd{@key{a}, elpher-set-bookmark-no-overwrite}
+@keycmd{@key{a}, elpher-bookmark-link}
Add a bookmark for the link at point. The minibuffer will prompt for
a name for the bookmark, which defaults to the display string.
-@keycmd{@key{A}, bookmark-set-no-overwrite}
+@keycmd{@key{A}, elpher-bookmark-current}
Add a bookmark for the current page. The minibuffer will prompt for
a name for the bookmark, defaulting to the display string associated
with the link that was followed to reach the current page.
-@keycmd{@key{B}, bookmark-bmenu-list}
+@keycmd{@key{B}, elpher-open-bookmarks}
Open a page displaying all current bookmarks. This is where you can
delete and search bookmarks, for example.
-
@end table
-If all your bookmarks disappeared in an upgrade from 2.10 to 2.11, you
-can import your old Elpher bookmarks into your Emacs bookmarks using
+On opening the bookmarks page, elpher will offer to import any legacy
+(2.x) bookmarks files into the new system. Once the import is complete,
+the original bookmarks file will have ``-legacy'' appended to it, so
+so that elpher knows not to import it again.
+
+If you have any other legacy bookmark files (besides the one in the
+original location, or specified in the @code{elpher-bookmarks-file}
+customization variable, which should be automatically detected), you can
+can import these using
@example
@kbd{M-x elpher-bookmark-import @key{RET}}
@end example
-Once this is done, you can delete the file with the Elpher bookmarks.
+Once this is done, you may delete these legacy bookmarks files.
@node Gopher character encodings, Encrypted gopher connections, Bookmarks, Top
@chapter Gopher character encodings
system used by whoever authored the document.
Unfortunately gopher lacks a systematic way of acquiring this necessary
-information. Thus, the details of the coding system must be either inferred from the binary data,
-or must be specified by the user.
+information. Thus, the details of the coding system must be either
+inferred from the binary data, or must be specified by the user.
By default, Elpher applies Emacs' built-in character encoding detection
system to the full (undecoded) response data and uses this to attempt to