Package: maildir-utils Version: 0.4-2 Severity: minor Tags: patch
Some typos in the man page mu-find.1. Patch attached. Thank you Filippo -- System Information: Debian Release: squeeze/sid APT prefers testing APT policy: (500, 'testing') Architecture: i386 (i686) Kernel: Linux 2.6.30-1-686 (SMP w/2 CPU cores) Locale: LANG=en_US.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash Versions of packages maildir-utils depends on: ii libc6 2.9-25 GNU C Library: Shared libraries ii libgcc1 1:4.4.1-4 GCC support library ii libglib2.0-0 2.22.0-1 The GLib library of C routines ii libgmime-2.0-2a 2.2.22-4 MIME library ii libsqlite3-0 3.6.18-1 SQLite 3 shared library ii libstdc++6 4.4.1-4 The GNU Standard C++ Library v3 ii libxapian15 1.0.16-3 Search engine library ii zlib1g 1:1.2.3.3.dfsg-15 compression library - runtime maildir-utils recommends no packages. maildir-utils suggests no packages. -- no debconf information
--- mu-find.1.orig 2009-11-02 17:51:29.000000000 +0100 +++ mu-find.1 2009-11-02 17:55:19.000000000 +0100 @@ -57,7 +57,6 @@ a shorthand for '--output=sql', while '-o a' gets you some aggregate data (statistics) about the matched messages. -.S .B --output=text gives a textual display of the messages found; you can use the .B --format @@ -123,7 +122,7 @@ .IP .SS Other options -.B --linkdir=, l +.B --linkdir=, -l .I <linkdir> set the maildir where .B mu-find @@ -174,7 +173,7 @@ parameter sets the fields to sort by, one letter per field (s=subject, d=date and so on, see the section on search expressions to get the full list). -.B sortdir +.B --sortdir determines whether we sort ascending or descending. Example (note: search expressions like 's:hello' are discussed in the next section):