Re: mutt header strangeness

2000-04-30 Thread Ron Farrer
Mike Brownlow ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > Even better: > my_hdr X-Operating-System: `uname -a|sed -e 's/#/\\#/'` Cool. Works good. I've added another one now... :) Ron -- Email: Home: Bellingham Linux Users Group: Al

Re: mutt header strangeness

2000-04-30 Thread Mike Brownlow
Mike Brownlow wrote: > Ron Farrer wrote: > > be "Linux mustang 2.2.14 #1 Sat Jan 8 16:09:20 PST 2000 alpha unknown". > > I think that the '#' is being interpreted as a comment at runtime. In > this email I used: > > my_hdr X-Operating-System: `uname -a|sed -e 's/#/Number /'` > > and it worked. W

Re: mutt header strangeness

2000-04-30 Thread Mike Brownlow
Ron Farrer wrote: > > Hey all; > > I have the following line in my .muttrc: > my_hdr X-Operating-System: `uname -a` > > For some reason all it reports is "Linux mustang 2.2.14" why? IMHO it should > be "Linux mustang 2.2.14 #1 Sat Jan 8 16:09:20 PST 2000 alpha unknown". I think that the '#' i

mutt header strangeness

2000-04-30 Thread Ron Farrer
Hey all; I have the following line in my .muttrc: my_hdr X-Operating-System: `uname -a` For some reason all it reports is "Linux mustang 2.2.14" why? IMHO it should be "Linux mustang 2.2.14 #1 Sat Jan 8 16:09:20 PST 2000 alpha unknown". TIA, Ron -- Email: Home: