quot; option : 'i', thus you don't need all the
[Hh][Rr][Ee][Ff] thing. You can write it this way :
sed 's|\(]*HREF=\([^ >]*\)[^>]*>\)\(.*\)\(\)|\1\3 [ \2 ]\4|gi'
(didn't check the rest of the regexp)
Flavien.
--
Linux! Guerrilla UNIX Development Venimus, Vidimus, Dolavimus.
-- Mark A. Horton KA4YBR, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
from cvs and tried your advice on it, with
no success.
What I'm trying to match are headers like :
Subject: Blah blah
To: "My Friend" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Another" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Flavien" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]&
you can guess because I ask, it does not work as I expected
it to.
Any advice welcome,
Thanks,
Flavien.
--
*** PUBLIC flooding detected from erikyyy
THAT's an erik, pholx ;)
-- Seen on #LinuxGER
Subject: Bar
N Subject: Gee
Your press Enter to read Foo, then you press D. What happens ?
deletes Foo and points the pager to Bar. Then the
points to Gee. In fact, Bar is no more new, but you've not
read it ! :-(
Another suggestion ?
Flavien.
--
* LG
(the
next-unread does not move the "cursor", so it displays the previous entry,
which I just read so hit delete because I think it's a duplicate...).
What I'd like is "display-message-only-if-unread", so that it gets me back
to the index when there are no more unread messages.
Any hint ?
Flavien.
27;m _so happy_ that I can read my mail archives
from work/home, that I can even use email without X, and that
it starts faster than my previous mailer ... Thanks to mutt
developpers ! :o)
Flavien.
--
Thinking is dangerous. It leads to ideas.
-- Seen on #Debian