I have been reconfiguring my archives to make the layout conform with the rest of my site, which I redesigned a few months ago, and took the opportunity to upgrade to v2.3.3 of Mhonarc. I really like the new features, but implementing them has not been smooth,and I think I have found a few bugs :( First, the archived messages were generated without the subject appearing as the headline. My outputted msg files just contained: <!--X-Subject-Header-Begin--> <H1></H1> <HR> <!--X-Subject-Header-End--> This occurred regardless of whether I modified the <SubjectHeader> resource: I got the same result both by omitting any definition of it from my rcfile and by explictly including the default definition. Other uses of the $SUBJECTNA$ resource variable worked fine. After a lot of futile hacking of my rcfile, I discovered that it depended on whether I was using the -savemem commandline flag: with -savemem, there was no subject; without it, the subject is there. This was replicated consistently with several message folders (all Mbox format), ranging in size from seven to 300 messages; it was consistent with several rcfiles, and also with no rcfile used. I am using Mhonarc 2.3.3 with the DJGPP port of Perl5.004_02 under MSDOS 6.22: the results are consistent whether I run it under raw DOS, or in a windowed or full-screen DOS session under WfWG3.11. I haven't found any other problems with this Perl setup. The other odd thing which is happening involves the $msg$ resource variable. All uses of $MSG(TFIRST)$ and $MSG(PARENT)$ consistently return a null value (""), which makes 'em rather useless :( Even if they worked, I can't find ways of conditionally setting the buttons for several of these values: it's very useful to have resources such as <TNEXTBUTTON> and <TNEXTBUTTONIA> ... but I can find no equivalent for other possible values of $BUTTON$: FIRST, LAST, TFIRST, TLAST, PARENT. Could this be addressed in the next version? Best wishes, Claire -- Claire McNab -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] "I cannot leave the future alone. I don't want it to go wonky" -- Margaret Thatcher