DEFAULT=${MAILDIR}/IN-spam
:0 f:
| formail -i X-Spam-reject-reason: not explicitly addressed to me
# END recipe (and END of ~/.procmailrc file)
-- Mr. Wade
--
Once we've got the bugs ironed out, we'll be running on flat
bugs.
of names.
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-- Mr. Wade
--
Whip me. Beat me. Make me maintain AIX.
Lukasz Zamel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Where I can download versions 1.3.? from?
I've checked www.mutt.org and they sey that 1.2.5i is the latest
version, but few users on this list use this versions.
Have you checked the devel subdirectories at the FTP sites?
Jean-Michel Kelbert [EMAIL PROTECTED] asked:
How can I do a reverse search in a folder (like Inbox or
outgoing) like in vim ?
Lawrence Mitchell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) replied:
This is in the help section in mut (got at by pressing ?), a
search fro search yields: esc/ backwards search
Matteo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm using mutt 1.2.5 on FreeBSD 4.3-STABLE box.
Today I've mounted /var partition with options noatime. I
rebooted, but later mutt doesn't work. Each time that I exit
from a Mailbox and press TAB+TAB to check for new messages,
mutt notifies that there are
On Mon, Jul 16, 2001, Chris Fuchs wrote:
on Wed,11 Jul 2001, Mr. Wade wrote:
Anthony Green [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would just like to find out if its possible in mutt to setup so that
if you use a signature file, the signature is added to the top of the
email, rather than
.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
I have also noticed that mbox mailbox files' modification times
seem not to be updated when messages are deleted. Whenever a
message is added, the file's modification time is updated,
though. Unfortunately, I have no idea why.
Andy Spiegl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Mutters,
I am gradually
to ~/mbox? ([n]/y):
Is there any way to suppress this message?
set move=no
Sam
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
~/.muttrc.home as the
initialization file instead of /.muttrc, you could use the
following:
mutt -F ~/.muttrc.home
Perhaps using this with some nifty scripting or aliasing will do
what you want.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Ricardo SIGNES [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I switched from Pine to mutt nearly a year ago, now, and
there's still only one thing I miss -- multiple IMAP servers.
I have three or four IMAP servers I'd like to deal with, and I
don't consider it an option to just c{servername}FOLDER all the
to use
something like this:
mailboxes ! `echo $HOME/Mail/IN*`
I use something similar and currently have 18 mailboxes declared
without problems.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
is a pseudo thread due to its subject, rather
than an element of a strict thread due to the other headers.
A message sorted into a thread that contains a In-Reply-To:
and/or a References: header for the thread will have a -
type of thread tree indicator.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice
Lukas Ruf wrote:
is there a possibility to configure mutt-1.x the way that fcc: get's
automatigally set to the folder where the message is located to that I
reply on ?
[...]
I hope this explains my problem.
If this issue has already been addressed somewhere, could you give me a
hint under
dotfiles. Setting it to . should enable all files to
be shown.
In my ~/.muttrc file, I have:
set mask=. # A regexp defining which files will be shown in the
# file browser, (always a case-sensitive match).
I hope this is what you meant and it helps.
-- Mr
) Support
In short, the $dsn_notify and $dsn_return variables are employed,
so checking those sections of the manual should help.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
Mr. Wade [mutt-users] 29/05/01 23:32 -0400:
I use vim also. Mine will do the word wrap, as you describe, but
the adding of new quote marks... how do you accomplish that?
If there's a single quotemark at the start of a long line and
you wrap
Alexander Skwar wrote:
So sprach Mr. Wade am Sun, May 20, 2001 at 06:47:44PM -0400:
You shouldn't need to do that. Mutt should call whatever you
specify by the $ispell variable with the -x switch and the
temporary file name on the command line for you.
Yeah, and that works very fine
Alexander Skwar wrote:
So sprach Wilhelm Wienemann am Sun, May 20, 2001 at 07:38:53PM +0200:
Maybe this will also work for you:
macro compose i :set ispell=ispell -T latin1 -p $HOME/.ispell_english
macro compose I :set ispell=/path_to_your_aspell\n aspell-american
Hmm, I don't
luck! =o)
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Masand, Manish wrote:
i have removed the quotes...
but the problem remains
is this problem becoz i am firing mutt on Unix by the following command
mutt -a xyz.txt [EMAIL PROTECTED] abc.txt
pls advise
Manish Masand
Hmm... it seems that the contents of the file specified by
darren chamberlain wrote:
Masand, Manish ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said something to this effect on
05/17/2001:
any solution to this problem? anyone?
Yeah:
mutt -a xyz.txt [EMAIL PROTECTED] (cat abc.txt; echo --; cat ~/.signature)
If you're going to do it that way, at least include the
Thomas Roessler wrote:
Pine also includes a crappy editor (pico - which is nevertheless
used by some people in order to ruin their configuration files), and
a full-blown file manager (pilot, if I recall this correctly).
Just don't quote it as an example.
(OK, we have a directory
'delete-messagenext-new'
This will cause Ctrl-x to do what you appear to be asking in both
the index and the pager.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
tagging the messages, typing ;Wn then pressing the
enter kay may do what you want.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Jeroen Valcke wrote:
Hey,
I want to mark multiple msgs as read. I have some mailing lists and I
don't want to read all msgs. How can I mark these as read.
It is possible to tag them all. But what then. Ctl-R (Mark Thread as
read) doesn't work on all the tagged msg only the selected msg
by ~/.muttrc)
you'll probably be best served to set the $envelope_from
variable.
set envelope_from
This will cause Mutt to derive the envelope sender from the
From: header.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
untagged messages, use the limit function, bound by
default to l. Try this: l~T. (To clear the limit pattern,
use l.)
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Christian H. Stork wrote:
How do I print something to the status line eg from a macro?
Even better, how could I get input for some scripts on the status line?
Well, I don't know about your second question, but to manipulate
the status line requires setting the $status_format variable.
This
Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
Using a large mallet, Mr. Wade whacked out:
folder-hook .'unmy_hdr To:'
folder-hook =IN-L-mutt-users 'my_hdr To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]'
A problem with this, though, is that list-replies tend to have
the list address twice
Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
Using a large mallet, Mr. Wade whacked out:
This was an attempt to have Mutt use a default To: address for
a mailbox folder, as I understand it.
Yes. And I use procmail with other headers (say Sender: - usually distinctive
to the list) to filter each
Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
Using a large mallet, Mr. Wade whacked out:
I do this as well. I think that perhaps I misunderstood the
original question. I was under the impression that the asker
wanted to know how to have a default To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
header specified when he
set record=+sent-mail
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Jens Chr. Lisner wrote:
I've set my sent-mail folder to ~/Mail/sent-mail. Mutt creates the
folder, but the mail is not saved.
I suppose this should be done, if the $record variable is set.
Mr. Wade advised:
You will need to set $copy as well as $record, e.g.
set folder=~/Mail
set copy
that accordingly for your situation.
A problem with this, though, is that list-replies tend to have
the list address twice in the To: field. I haven't spent any
time determining a method to correct that.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
this. Any suggestions tips?
Mr. Wade wrote:
This might help or give you a starting place, anyway:
folder-hook .'unmy_hdr To:'
folder-hook =IN-L-mutt-users 'my_hdr To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Obviously, I use =IN-L-mutt-users as the mailing list folder;
you should sdjust
!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
, and only macros use functions. Is
this true, or am I just confused?
Try using this as the command portion of the folder-hook:
push delete-pattern~d 2wenter
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
the
following in ~/.muttrc or a another sourced file:
color index red black ~v
Of course, you could substitute whatever colors you like. This
has effect only when the thread is collasped. When the thread is
not collapsed, the color is not evidenced.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux
Efata wrote:
How I give sign or color to message (message have child only)
in collapse thread?
Mr. Wade replied:
I think you are asking how to specify index colors for a message
that is part of a collapsed thread. Assuming your terminal
supports color, this can be done using something
Michael Tatge wrote:
Mr. Wade muttered:
ZHENG, You-Zhong wrote:
I've read the sec 4.8 in mutt manual, but I still can't get it.
It seems if you use lists, the %L index_format won't work,
but list-reply key works in both lists and subscribe patterns.
There must be some
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jonathan Rosebaugh)
Doing this would allow you to type email plover or mnsu in
order to refer to their respective addresses.
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
ZHENG, You-Zhong wrote:
On 05-01-2001, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
So why bother just renaming lists to subscribe?
Please read the mutt documentation (should be there on your pc) for why.
I've read the sec 4.8 in mutt manual, but I still can't get it.
It seems if you use
Raphaƫl HALIMI wrote:
How do I unsubscribe from that list ?
Send an e-mail message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
following in the BODY of the message:
unsubscribe mutt-users [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
# synchronizing a mailbox, (without asking.)
set move=no # Do not move (or ask to move) read messages from
# $spoolfile to $mbox
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Jason A . Fager wrote:
Is there an easy way to get mutt to ignore messages that match a certain
pattern? I figure I could use l with an inverse pattern, but I have
not been able to figure out how to use multiple invocations of l
multiple times with cumulative effect (like you can use t
retrieval utility like
fetchmail instead. Personally, I find it more convenient and
useful, especially since it has more flexibility and can handle
multiple accounts, (although, with some clever hooks, I guess
Mutt could emulate some of the functionality.)
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux
index_format=%4C %S %{%m/%d} %-18.18n %?M?(#%03M)(%4c)? %s
Good luck.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
could pipe you outgoing mail through a script
that checks the Subject: header using formail and alters it to
whatever you like if it maches Re: your mail, again using
formail.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
prior to this
line.)
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
Rod Pike wrote:
Can a send hook be used so that ultimately, a different mail server will
be used to send the mail?
Just off the top of my head... you could use a send-hook to
change the $sendmail variable to call a script that would copy an
alternate sendmail.cf into /etc/sendmail.cf before
are talking about this, since you specifically mentioned the
headers.) If readability is impaired, the object normal may
help improve that, e.g.
color normal cyan black
I hope you get it fixed to your liking. :)
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
change this behavior?
You'll want to take a look at the $index_format variable. Like
many things in Mutt, the format of the index is highly
configurable.
Good luck.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
, so I
selected one that looks nice for my own use. I'm not sure,
though, if you will have that luxury.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
-To: or
References: header field.
If $strict_threads is set, then you won't get sorting into
pseudo-threads by the Subject: header field, and the *
notations will not be there either.
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
number of fonts in there, (in excess of 150.)
I use:
$ setfont -v lat4a-16+.psfu.gz
I like that font because it's clear and large, making it easy to
read, (for me).
Good luck!
-- Mr. Wade
--
Linux: The Choice of the GNU Generation
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