o_view only looks for mailcap entries with the "copiousoutput" tag.
If you want to use an interactive browser like links, you must press 'v'
and press 'return' on the html attachment.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMA
t mutt is trying to do when it hangs.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
12:00), and warns you.
I guess I had always assumed that Mutt took the timestamp from the file,
not from looking at the current time. Interesting..
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewle
window for you to edit in, while in the
xterm where you ran Mutt, it thinks you are finished editing? That's
the only thing I can think of.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hew
.com"; at the beginning
of the first line, well, there is a colon there! So Mutt thinks you are
adding a new header to your message, "http: //www.something.com". So
Mutt does not fix your mistake in this case, because it does not look
like a mistake.
--
David DeSimone | "Th
rmat is so loosely defined.
Mutt chooses to be picker about the "From " syntax because some mailers
don't properly escape a "From " that is inside the body of the message.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
e these in a macro...
macro index {
macro index }
Then the cursor would sit still, while the index scrolls around it.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he
, two send-hooks are created, one on the folder
"/dir1/folder", and the other on "/dir2/foobar". If you are expecting
that the second setting of $folder will cause the first hook to be
redefined, so that it is triggered when you switch to "/dir2/folder",
you will b
op-up messages to all the users you'd like to notify.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT
e it to the right
place most of the time. You can always override the choice though.
Of course, if you can teach Mutt to do that, then you can also teach
procmail to put the mail in that folder to begin with.
The secret to productivity: Get the computer to do the work! That's
what it's
Negating that matches nothing,
which is the effect you see.
A more specific pattern, such as '~t .' might work better, since it is
not a simple pattern and may avoid the internal translation.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
at the time stamps, to
stop reporting new mail.
So you need to take a look at how each program that detects mail for you
is doing the detection, and if you don't like the way they are doing it,
maybe there is some way you can put a stop to it.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of
Martin Karlsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Limit to ~A (all) does it for me.
>
> Or why not to . (a dot)?
> Fewer keystrokes :-)
As I understand it, Mutt internally translates the search pattern "."
into "~A", so they are one and the same.
-
. Perhaps your ncurses is not up to date. Perhaps the correct
location of ncurses has not been determined. These are things that are
very difficult to tell from so far away out on the net, as we are.
Perhaps you could post the entire output from "make", or maybe even the
output from
ill be saved when you exit the folder.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
u want with it, and then
ALSO call the real "sendmail" program, so that your mail still gets
delivered. Then you'd set $sendmail to point to your script. After
suitable testing, of course.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |
gs
will be correct.
This annoys me, too.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
Simon White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This seems to happen specifically when I have input more than 8
> characters, which is usual for filenames with full paths and email
> addresses.
I wonder if you could try running "stty -tabs" before you start Mutt.
--
Davi
e variable settings are for, but I can't figure out,
what does this do?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Ric
a folder, is in your
folder directory, so it begins browsing from there.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
e, whereas base64 incurs a fixed 33%
increase in size.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|P
When sending to
, $variable has the value "CCC". When sending to anyone
else, it has the value "DDD". Regardless of folder.
So you see, mixing folder-hooks and send-hooks that set the same
variable, is not a good idea.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equalit
hook to set the signature back to what the folder-hook would have set
it to.
The only way I can think of to handle this is to have a set of folder-
hooks which recreate the default send-hook each time you enter a new
folder.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on th
hment with the unlink flag, then you are telling
Mutt that your file has the same disposition as any of its temp files.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found
t user@domain, but still from @domain?
The inclusive behavior of ~C makes it hard to write patterns that get
exactly what you want. :/
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard
d the mail, you would
still want those temporary files deleted. However, any attachments that
you set the delete flag on, will also be deleted if you quit the
message, since Mutt doesn't know the difference.
Beware of this behavior!
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality re
;s
screens. Which are probably a different size from yours. Be kind, and
write your mail to display nicely somewhere else.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that h
Suresh Ramasubramanian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Which I suspected ... the [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Me) is depreciated, and seems to
> be more common on usenet than on e-mail.
If you configure Mutt with --enable-exact-address, it will not rewrite
the address in the preferred for
ng koi8-r,
and the other using iso-8859-9?
I don't think Mutt can create any multipart type besides
multipart/mixed, though.. you might have wanted multipart/alternative?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no m
information in included in what you can edit.
> the problem is, some muas send 8-bit text in messages marked with
> charset=iso-8859-1.
What's wrong with that? iso-8859-1 is an 8-bit character set.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL P
don't
think you can change the default.
And, why would you want to? The reason Mutt chooses quoted-printable is
because it encodes to a smaller result than base64. If the base64
encoding had come out smaller, Mutt would have chosen that.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equa
not look at that timestamp unless you
sort by "date-received". Likewise, when tagging by date, ~d examines
the Date: header, while ~r examines the enevelope separator time.
> Once again, IMHO, if the edited mail is sent, this date should be
> changed as well.
I tend to agree
t it tries to display an image as a text
attachment, because that's what it was told by the sender to do!
You should complain to the person who sent you the mail, and tell them
to fix their mailer so that it sends things out correctly. That will
help everyone.
--
David DeSimone | "The d
David Champion <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Maybe the original poster (I forgot who...) would be OK with
> "unbind * *" and "unmacro * *".
But there is no "unbind" nor "unmacro" command...
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of
reported to mutt-dev, not mutt-users.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|PGP: 5B 47 34 9F
tt should simply fail to start without some sort of configuration
input. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
uot;-USE_FLOCK". That is, dot-locking and fcntl-locking should be
enabled. If they aren't, you could be in trouble.
> At first I thought it might be Netscape attempting to access the
> files, so I've redirected my mailbox to a new directory that Netscape
> wouldn't acces
s in the system Muttrc. This way, it is possible for a site to
implement their preferred keybinding policies, without having to
"un-Elm-ify" Mutt every time you want to get proper generic bindings.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTEC
host2}
{user3@host3}
However, I'm not sure how you would specify the passwords; if they all
have the same password, setting $imap_pass should work; otherwise you
might have to type each password as Mutt asks for it.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this
;' with the -B8BITMIME flag when
sending 8-bit messages to enable ESMTP negotiation.
So, you have $use_8bitmime set somewhere. Unset it.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
ient, then examining the modified time of the directory from
another client.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Ri
hould have reasonable
defaults, though.
Anyway, Mutt is supposed to notice new mail without being told to look
for it.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found t
probably run a
cron job that launches "sendmail -q" at some interval if you decide not
to run the daemon.
That being said, I see no problem in leaving the daemon running, if you
simply firewall the SMTP port from external traffic.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality r
it complains about the
"--" option, you can either upgrade your sendmail or edit Mutt's source
and remove the code that appends the "--" option. Also complain to
mutt-dev if you have to do this. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this
et mask="!^\.[^.]"
If you unset it, I suppose you would see everything.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chester
character...
Does your "mutt -v" output say "+USE_GNU_REGEX"? If not, it's using
your system's regexp library, which may not support all the extensions
being used. If that's the case, it would be possible to rewrite the
regexp in some cases, but it would become even
Steffan Hoeke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Can anyone tell me what's the difference between the 2 ?
One of them is right, and the other one is wrong. :)
(mutt.org is the right one)
--
David DeSimone | "The doc
imes as they appear, at the beginning of a
subject. So a subject like this:
Subject: Fwd: Re[3]: [Mailing-List] Re: What the heck?
will be treated as the subject "What the heck?" And if I reply to it,
my reply looks like this:
Subject: Re: What the heck?
I like it that way.
i keep geting errors like DSN errors
Does your version of sendmail even support DSN? Maybe you should turn
off the dsn_* options in your .muttrc.
> Which file do i need to edit to rectify it
You need to set up your sendmail.cf file.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equa
till a good idea to fix your "alternates",
so that your address won't show up in group-replies and followup-to's.
folder-hook > 'set \
sort=date-sent'
For my 'received' folder, I like to sort by date. Index format remains
the
ts dumped to the printer.
I believe there is a mailcap syntax to specify commands for printing.
I also believe that Mutt pays attention to these. Perhaps adding a
command "; print=/bin/true" will cause octet-stream attachments to be
skipped? Or an alternate filter could be run?
--
D
ferently on
your system. Here's how mine is set in .muttrc:
alternative_order text/enriched text/plain text/html
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that
suited to handle the task of making
your E-mail appear to come from a particular domain or pseudo-domain.
And, once configured properly, ALL of your E-mail, no matter what MUA
(even /bin/mail) will have proper headers. Wouldn't that be nice?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of
messages
if you wish it to do so.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT|PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
il.file and
distribute it to all of the senders you name on the command line.
You can even put the list of names into a file, and insert them thusly:
sendmail `cat users.list` < mail.file
Voila! A mutt-less solution (on the mutt mailing list, no less)! :)
--
David DeSimone | &qu
Mikko Hänninen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> First save the email to a separate file.
> Then just call sendmail on the file:
> sendmail -t [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /path/to/folder/file
What you describe is exactly what the (b)ounce command does in Mutt.
--
David DeSimone | &
can also simply tag all the messages that you want to save, then
save them using a grouped command, and they will all be saved to the
single folder that you specify. Use the tag-prefix (default ";") before
the save command, to specify saving all tagged messages.
--
David DeSimone | &quo
NOT want copies of your own submissions
returned back to you.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
Richardson IT
Mikko Hänninen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> folder-hook . 'push "1"'
A bit more efficient:
folder-hook . 'push '
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really cl
/RFC822/X-Unix,
A=procmail -a $h -d $u
So your answer is "It depends." :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
t mentions an MTA, this might be. But there's not enough
information given to tell me why I would *ever* want to feed my Bcc
header to an MTA. Why is the default value "yes"?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there
ot;To: undisclosed-recipients:;" header, and then give sendmail a command
line such as "sendmail -(options) user1@host1 user2@host2 ...". So,
sendmail would have the correct envelope addresses, but they would not
appear in the message.
But there is no code to do this in Mutt cur
e, why is it on an NFS
server? Just put the mailbox on the one machine that is going to access
it. No more NFS slow-down.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard |
in which the
mail server tries to update your mail spool while Mutt is also trying to
update it, leading to mailbox corruption. Using the correct locking
protocols would avoid this, although it would slow things down.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMA
nsider this a show stopper but it was
> enough for me to back out 1.1.9 and go back to 1.0.
It would be incredible if such a slow-down escaped the notice of any of
the developers.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is
text that might have been added. I am
certainly still able to, say, distinguish a message's headers from its
body, or quoted text from non-quoted, but the color simply makes the
process easier and less error-prone.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[
d it lately,
though. Do you get correct colors with this?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |
Ralf Hildebrandt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> does GNUpg work on your HP-UX box?
It runs fine here, on HP-UX 10.20. I don't remember having to do more
than the usual contortions to build on HP-UX.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on
g or --with-curses configure
directives, on HP-UX 10.20. Building without slang or ncurses, though,
has always failed, though. Is this what you refer to?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
ctions are "J" and
"K", which are the shifted letters. VI users will find these bindings
convenient. Others will likely not find them comprehensible. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man r
n mtime greater than its atime, but mutt
> doesn't seem to realize that with or without BUFFY_SIZE.
Can anyone come up with an explanation for this? I can't.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man
l -e '@stat = stat("/path/to/mfolder"); print "Mod = $stat[9], Acc =
$stat[8]\n";'
This prints the exact times, to the second, which you can compare. This
is what Mutt actually does.
Using this technique, perhaps you can determine what the problem is.
--
David DeSimone
der-hooks. For those, ~A matches the home directory of user "A". :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
at offers. Why is the advantage of mutt, or any
> text-based email client?
If TheBat! does everything that he wants it to, then he should use it.
Mutt isn't trying to take over the world. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
d, so it does not poll for mail in the
background while waiting for a keypress from you. However, there is a
variable called $timeout which tells Mutt how long to wait for you to
press a key. If you haven't pressed a key by then, it will stop waiting
for the keypress, go and poll for mai
tation is merely for readability; there should be no
whitespace before the "#!".
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Ch
r-unusable vendor tools
>(Sun's patch is another one, for that matter)
I do disagree with you about HP's make having less features than GNU
make, but I don't think that makes it "near-unusable". Nevertheless,
installing GNU tools has never hurt anybody. :)
--
David D
{
exec "netscape", $url;
die "netscape: $!\n";
}
}
else
{
exec "lynx", $url;
die "lynx: $!\n";
}
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | t
!
>
> fcntl: Invalid argument (errno = 22)
Yes, Mutt wants to lock '/dev/null' and cannot do so. I don't know
whether to call that a bug or af eature. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no
John E. Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > If I remember rightly, slang does not use terminfo
>
> It uses terminfo on systems that have it. For others, it uses termcap.
Thanks, I'll stop spreading misinformation now. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctri
ssages to /dev/null
(it isn't lightning-fast!), just to un-tag the messages? My favorite
way to untag all tagged messages is ";t", which means "apply the 'tag'
command to all tagged messages". It's quick and painless. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doc
pect in this
case, and slang does not. Either way, however, Mutt is not the source
of the problem.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
known as "your login session",
we must guess at the most likely problems, and you must demonstrate that
our guesses are not the source of your problem before we can produce
more.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there
.dat
> tic tmp.dat
> ---
Yes, but, you said this in your earlier message:
> I changed terminfo to ^[[5~ and so on as Marius suggested. But
> "infocmp $TERM" still gives the same codes.
Since the change is not taking effect, you apparently aren't changing
the t
fo database, you must run "tic".
That is, generate a file with infocmp, edit it, then compile that file
with tic. Is that what you did?
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett
than one element.
Actually, quoting patterns seems to be always a good idea in .muttrc.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K.
erate a special
sequence, and then tell Mutt how to recognize it. For instance, in
.Xdefaults:
XTerm.vt100.translations: #override \
ShiftTab: string("\033\011")
Then in Mutt:
macro index \e "~F"
P.S. All untested! Caveat Hackor! :)
--
canning for
new mail in the folder. I did this once, manaually, when I really
wanted that feature in one of my maildirs... Can't remember why,
though. :)
Anyway, since the maildir structure allows for it, it might be possible
for Mutt to do it. But someone else will have to code the patch.
ew" will always get Mutt's attention, even if
you left them in the folder. Nice that people can have it whichever way
they like. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Pack
; copiousoutput
application/octet-stream; octet-view %s; copiousoutput
The main difference is that Netscape will not quote filenames correctly,
so you must use "%s" to keep from getting errors on files with spaces in
them. Also notice that formats Netscape can handle internal
ct Content-Type headers into the correct values. For instance,
you could detect mail from a particular sender, and rewrite headers that
you know he sends out that are broken.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man reall
Mikko Hänninen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> And yes, mutt -y shouldn't exit silently... mutt -Z will likely start
> to work too once you get mutt -y working.
Mutt might not be exiting "silently"; it might actually be crashing, and
wants to dump core, but can
ad look at it
this way (and maybe you are, but it's not clear from reading here):
If you say "yes", then Mutt will reply to the address(es) in the
Reply-To: header.
If you say "no", then Mutt will reply to the address in the From:
header.
I don't remember if it is
tag all messages, and pipe them to the command "munpack").
Admittedly, this isn't much fun, either, but it's easier.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Pa
ve-hook '~C mutt-users' +mutt-users
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44
'^(Good|Bad) signature from user ".*"'
mono body bold'[a-z0-9][-a-z_0-9/.%+]+@[-a-z_0-9.]+\.[-a-z]+'
mono body underline
'((https?|ftp)://|www\.)[-a-z_0-9@#$%&+=:;'~,./?]+[a-z_0-9/]'
--
David DeSimone | &quo
ew mail. If this is feasible for you, you should go ahead and
switch to Maildir format.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Che
ody posted here several months ago.
In that system, the "xterm" command is hard-coded into the library, so
if you want to change it, you must edit the code. Not too hard, if
you're a programmer.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL P
e? You might want to post the "garbage" here, so that
we can see what you're talking about. It might be something important
that you're simply not familiar with.
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no
ated as part of your message.
You should change your E-mail habits accordingly. :)
--
David DeSimone | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard | found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Cheste
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