Re: solaris + linux

2001-07-08 Thread David
On Fri, 06 Jul 2001, adam morley wrote: i dont like to move my hand over there, so ive never noticed that. have you had any luck getting it to bind them right? (or have you tried at all?) what do you use home/end for in mutt? Basically I don't use home/end in mutt. However I use them a

Replying sends mail to my adress

2001-07-08 Thread Alexander Skwar
Hi I'm using mutt 1.3.19i. Sometimes when I reply to a mail, mutt sets the recipient to [EMAIL PROTECTED], ie. to my address instead of to the author's address. What may I have setup wrong in my .muttrc? This is the header of a mail where mutt set the To: wrong: From askwar Sun Jul

accent problem

2001-07-08 Thread Benjamin Michotte
hello, I'm belgian so I use accents « éàèù » and so on... with my 1.2.5i, I can see my accents but when I try to use a 1.3.x, I can't have them. I try to configure with --enable-locales-fix but I've got \351 \352, ... instead of éè... I've in my .profile LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1 LESSCHARSET=latin1

Re: accent problem

2001-07-08 Thread Vincent Lefevre
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], Benjamin Michotte [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1 Under Linux, I need en_US.ISO8859-1 (for instance), and under Solaris, I need iso_8859_1. -- Vincent Lefèvre [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Web: http://www.vinc17.org/ - 100% validated HTML - Acorn Risc PC,

Re: accent problem

2001-07-08 Thread Benjamin Michotte
On Sun, Jul 08, 2001 at 10:36:07PM +0200, Vincent Lefevre wrote: Under Linux, I need en_US.ISO8859-1 (for instance), and under Solaris, I need iso_8859_1. It's the same... but in fact, this is very desappointing because it works fine on 1.2.5 but not in 1.3.x -- Vincent Lefèvre [EMAIL

Re: accent problem

2001-07-08 Thread Francois Zellinger
On Sun, Jul 08, 2001 at 11:47:05PM +0200, Jean-Charles Salzeber wrote: On Sun, Jul 08, 2001 at 09:13:11PM +0200, Benjamin Michotte wrote: I'm belgian so I use accents « éàèù » and so on... I've in my .profile LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1 LESSCHARSET=latin1 export LC_CTYPE LESSCHARSET

Defaulting to thread mode

2001-07-08 Thread Sam Carleton
A: Every time I bring up mutt, I am doing a o -- t to get into thread mode. Is there some way I can default the mode to thread mode? B: I am using qmail and ~/Maildir/. Every time I exit mutt, I am prompted with: Move read messages to ~/mbox? ([n]/y): Is there any way to suppress this

Re: Defaulting to thread mode

2001-07-08 Thread Mr. Wade
Sam Carleton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: A: Every time I bring up mutt, I am doing a o -- t to get into thread mode. Is there some way I can default the mode to thread mode? set sort=threads B: I am using qmail and ~/Maildir/. Every time I exit mutt, I am prompted with: Move read messages

sourcing different config files

2001-07-08 Thread Will Yardley
Is it possible to source different mutt config files somehow based on a shell script type thingie? I guess I could have my .zshrc copy the appropriate mutt config file to .muttrc based on where i'm logging in from but this seems kind of silly. basically i use the 'SSH_CLIENT' env variable to

Re: sourcing different config files

2001-07-08 Thread David Champion
On 2001.07.09, in [EMAIL PROTECTED], Will Yardley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Is it possible to source different mutt config files somehow based on a shell script type thingie? I guess I could have my .zshrc copy the appropriate mutt config file to .muttrc based on where i'm logging in

Re: sourcing different config files

2001-07-08 Thread Mr. Wade
Will Yardley [EMAIL PROTECTED] asked: Is it possible to source different mutt config files somehow based on a shell script type thingie? Using a command line argument, you can specify a different initialization file to read instead of the ~/.muttrc file. For example, to start Mutt using