And btw, mail to the [EMAIL PROTECTED] address bounces.

G'luck,
Peter

-- 
I am the thought you are now thinking.

On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 01:47:25PM +0200, Peter Pentchev wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 01:06:22AM -0800, Jason Helfman wrote:
> > I'd like to use this setting, too, but right now I have:
> > 
> > set editor="vim -c 'set tw=72 et'"
> > 
> > Can I incorporate this into it??
> > 
> > set editor="vim -c ':0;/^$'"
> 
> From the vim manpage:
> 
>        -c {command}
>                    {command} will be  executed  after  the  first
>                    file  has been read.  {command} is interpreted
>                    as an Ex command.  If the  {command}  contains
>                    spaces  it  must  be enclosed in double quotes
>                    (this depends on  the  shell  that  is  used).
>                    Example: Vim "+set si" main.c
>                    Note:  You  can  use up to 10 "+" or "-c" com-
>                    mands.
> 
> According to the note, it would be OK to do something like:
> 
>       set editor="vim -c 'set tw=72 et' -c ':0;/^$'
> 
> G'luck,
> Peter
> 
> -- 
> I had to translate this sentence into English because I could not read the original 
>Sanskrit.
> 
> > On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 02:31:29AM -0600, Timothy Legant muttered:
> > | On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 09:59:45AM +0200, Peter Pentchev wrote:
> > | > On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 07:35:12AM +0000, Viktor Lakics wrote:
> > | > > Hi All,
> > | > > 
> > | > > I have an autocommand for temporary mutt files. I want to move the
> > | > > cursor down 6 positions automatically when I start a new mail (this
> > | > > would move the cursor right under the headers (i use edit headers).  > But i 
>can't seem to figure out how to do this from a vimrc file...
> > | > 
> > | > You could try setting the mutt 'editor' variable to something like
> > | > 
> > | >         /usr/local/bin/vim +6j
> > | > 
> > | > This shall affect editing old messages, too, but it will probably
> > | > do what you want.
> > | 
> > | You might not always want to move down 6 lines. Perhaps in the future
> > | you will add a new header (using my_hdr) to certain messages. You might
> > | want to consider the following instead:
> > | 
> > | set editor="vim -c ':0;/^$'"
> > | 
> > | which will search for and move to the first blank line. In an email
> > | message that should be the first line after all the headers, no matter
> > | how many header lines there are.
> 

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