ing. -- Rich Cook
>
>
> :-D
> --
> David T-G * It's easier to fight for one's principles
> (play) [EMAIL PROTECTED] * than to live up to them. -- fortune cookie
> (work) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://www.justpickone.org/davidtg/Shpx gur Pbzzhavpngvbaf Qrprapl Npg!
>
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
suggestions on how to get back to where I used
to be?
Thanks!
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
explanation.
>
> Now, if you think I'm wrong, don't hesitate to say so. Otherwise, I'll
> get rid definitely of the ugly piece of code that removed our modified
> 'In-Reply-To' from the 'References' header of the replies.
>
> Regards,
> --
> Cedric
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ge on the jtan system, it's easiest for me to use mutt
> and the POP server.
> Best,
> Brian
> --
> Brian McNeill Advertising & Corporate Photography
> phone 215.368.3326
> 1511 Cowpath Road, Hatfield, PA 19440
>
>
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ou look at "save_name"? I think it also interacts with "reverse_alias".
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
what
> you're describing - but I'd really appreciate it if I were proven wrong ;-)
>
> Chris
>
> --
>We are not who we think we are. We are not who others think we are. We
>are who we think others think we are. -Anonymous
>
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
des instant visual cues about
> message relationships. Hope this, or the final offspring, makes it into
> mutt releases at some point.
>
> Chris
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
version, you can use the
change mailbox command "c", then give a URL, "pop:[EMAIL PROTECTED]",
you will be prompted for the password.
This doesn't actually download, you're reading the mailbox with pop, but then
you can tag all "T*", and save them all to your spool, or something ";s".
Cheers,
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Louis LeBlanc [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Fully Funded Hobbyist, KeySlapper Extrordinaire :)
> http://acadia.ne.mediaone.net ԿԬ
>
> Houston, Tranquillity Base here. The Eagle has landed.
> -- Neil Armstrong
>
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
solution would
> be:
What I do is have edit_headers set in my muttrc.
Then I do a reply, but when I get popped into vim, I delete
the references line (that makes it not a reply) and change
the subject to whatever I want.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Quoting Chris Fuchs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, who wrote:
> I currently get mail from a MUA that simply chops all lines beyond
> 80 characters to the nearest word. For unquoted text that's okay,
I'm curious, what's the MUA?
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
%s ; copiousoutput ; nametemplate=%s.html
lynx uses the extension to determine if it's html.
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Quoting Suresh Ramasubramanian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, who wrote:
> Sam Roberts [mutt-users] <19/06/01 11:51 -0400>:
> > Have you tried this, Suresh?
> > It says "emulates mailx", and that's it.
> > And on my system (RedHat, which is fairly mainstr
haven't
done this kind of thing before from C before, or the equivalent
in whatever language you're using.
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ut from the directory listing
and procmail log above, it looks like procmail is putting
mail in /home/keith/Mail/Inbox but that you are expecting
it in /home/keith/Inbox, perhaps too simple.
Try 2, is your spoolfile set correctly?
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
using procmail.
> Any ideas? I am at a loss.
Unix boxes have a mail delivery system, you're just missing a picture
of how the pieces fit together to make that system.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
tt -h
> Also, can someone enlighten me as to all of the important POP3 commands
> that should go into the .muttrc ?
setpop_host=
setpop_user=...
setpop_pass=...
#unset pop_delete
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
_
> _/ Troy Heber
> _/Software Engineer
>_/_/_/_/_/_/ Technical Consulting Lab
> _/ _/_/ _/Hewlett-Packard Company
> _/ _/_/_/_/
> _/ Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> _/ Phone: 970.898.3240
> i n v e n t
> ___
>
>
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
r deletion,
> the folders I'm in is deleted.
I have this set up, too, but I like it! Try "set save_empty", I think
that will get what you want. That's the default, so you probably have
an "unset save_empty" somewhere in the cfg file you downloaded?
> Would
t; >
> > Mutt doesn't support it natively, but your proposal sounds
> > intriguing. Michael Elkins (the guy who wrote mutt) has already
> > written a tool to do the hard part - synchronising a local maildir
> > tree with an IMAP server. It's called isync, you can find it on
> > freshmeat.net, you should take a look at it. your idea sounds
> > intriguing.
> >
> > -Brendan
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
> field to be expanded into the names of everyone on that list.
Then how do you expect the mail go to worker1, worker2, ...?
And what purpose is the alias other than to expand? If you
remove it it won't expand.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
iable for this but didn't see anything so here goes:
>
> I'd like to be able to reply to forwards without the "Re: Fw:" just the
> "Re:". Sometimes I get email forwarded several times like
> "Fw: Fwd: Forward: " and I'd like the reply to be &q
mailcap_path=~/.mailcap
> >
> > And don't forget to include "auto_view text/html" in your .muttrc.
> >
> > This is in my .mailcap:
> > text/html; w3m -dump -T text/html %s; copiousoutput
> >
> > Tschoe,
> > Steff
>
> --
> ===
> Dr. Christian Seberino
> ===
> SPAWARSYSCEN D02P || (619) 553-2564
> 49330 ELECTRON DR ||
> SAN DIEGO CA 92152-5451|| [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ===
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
at support it, but still be readable with
> > programs that don't do wrapping.
>
> well, the whole point is that ppl dont like unwrapped text. so one solution has
>been format=flowed.
>
> any others?
Don't send unwrapped text?
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
e Mutt source, (although I may be mistaken.)
> I suppose one could hack the source and recompile Mutt to effect
> a change.
You can edit the content-type type of the outgoing message with
ctrl-T and add "; format=flowed". Maybe there's a way of automateing
that, perhaps a hot-key that feeds the keyboard strokes to mutt?
Enjoy!
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
t sure every soft acts in the same way...
No, not till the next blank line. # comments go to the end of line.
A \ before an end-of-line makes it not be an end of line. So, it
goes to the "next" one (that's not escaped). It's the same in C and C++:
[sroberts]$ cat eol.c
int main()
{
// a comment \
printf("hello world");
return 0;
}
[sroberts]$ make eol
cc eol.c -o eol
[sroberts]$ ./eol
[sroberts]$
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> An alternative to wordview is catdoc available from
> http://www.fe.msk.ru/~vitus/catdoc/ (and it may well be part of
Also, there is antiword, yet another ms-word to text converter.
Anybody know about a ms-powerpoint and/or ms-excel to text converter?
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
27;t be a problem, sine you don't need it to.
That envelope address is where you'll get a bounce if, for example,
the user you sent mail to doesn't actually exist. This should be fine,
the user at the far end will never see this address, only the one in
the from field. Of course, if it bounces, the bounce will come
back to where you wrote it from, not the address you wrote into the
"from" field of the message.
I'm not convinced this will make things any clearer, but I tried.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
specify the name of the folder that folder-hook
matched in it's associated actions?
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
7;t end in .html, it just spit it out verbatim. I had to use the
name template option.
How come this works for you? Alternately, why didn't it work for me?
Any ideas?
Just curious,
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Yes, put in your muttrc:
auto_view text/html
and in your ~/.mailcap:
text/html; lynx -localhost -dump %s ; copiousoutput ; nametemplate=%s.html
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ot;perm" or "mode"). When mail gets saved
> it creates files with 600 permissions whereas I want 660.
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ay?) to
forward to one of a set of smtp servers, and to reconfigure which one
on the fly.
I'm kind of puzzled, I don't know what your network setup is, or what
you're trying to achieve, so I can't really make any suggestions.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
mutt-users' =mutt-users
subscribe sawfish@
fcc-save-hook '~C sawfish'=sawfish
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
it
> this way? I also use this same server for routing mail via SMTP from
> Windows 98 clients using Netscape or Outlook/Express so I'm not just
> limited to a mutt environment.
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
e at particular times,
this might be what you're looking for.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
. In the 1.3 series it is full-assed, and absolutely The Right Way to
read mail, particularly since IMAP was designed in part to solve
the problem you have.
I've been using it as my primary means of reading mail for over a year.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
t expect
to be done hacking cmu's sieve for at least a few weeks. Perhaps I'll post
here to see if anybody wants to be a guinea pig^h^h^h^h alpha tester.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
t; text, so I can read the thing?
I do this.
~/.mailcap: text/html; lynx -localhost -dump %s ; copiousoutput ; nametemplate=%s.html
~/.muttrc: auto_view text/html
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
GNU emacs has the emacs-nox
executable, which not only doesn't start up the gui, but also doesn't have
X linked in, so it'll load faster. The people I know who use mutt with
emacs as their editor do that, but I don't think they use XEmacs.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
e available at http://www.cosy.sbg.ac.at/~andi/
> It now cooperates with gpg - at least the 'make check' does not fail or
> hang
>
--
Sam Roberts, sroberts at uniserve dot com, www.emyr.net/Sam
You're aware that mutt doesn't use smtp, it execs
an external program, mail by default, AFAIK, to
deliver mail? Do you have your system setup so that
works?
--
Sam Roberts, sam at cogent dot ca, www.cogent.ca
From: Williams, James A (James) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I am try
From: Jose Monteiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> is it possible to use Gnus style 'From: ' addresses when sending
> mail:
I'm not familiear with Gnus, but I am with RFC822, and this
style of address is garbage.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Doe)
This^^ is an RFC822 header **comment**, a
Mutt isn't the tool for this, try metamail, it has
a mail work-alike with intelligent and systematic
MIME extensions (and MIME is what specifies how
to encode non-us-ascii chars in header).
Sam
--
Sam Roberts, sam at cogent dot ca, www.cogent.ca
> (3) The receipient gets unreadable
From: Lars Hecking <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> > I am new on this list and also a new user of mutt.
> >
> > I haven't found anything in the 'manual.txt' about handling
> > extra-headers like 'Troll' or 'X-Troll' ones. May be I haven't look at
> > the right place ?
>
> 'Troll:' is not a legal RCF 8
From: Charles Curley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> On Thu, Apr 13, 2000 at 04:26:49PM +0100, Lars Hecking wrote:
> ->
> -> > doc/manual.txt may be there, but for reading on line and searching it is
> -> > nearly useless.
> ->
> -> Not true. Get a decent text viewer. For instance less.
>
> Lars, it c
> searches difficult because you may have to search twice. How about also
> including the manual as html?
Use 'less' to read it, not your text editor (as it sounds you are doing).
less understands ^h as makespace and allows searching in the natural way,
as well as displaying th
nstalled the required sgmltools on my machine
> and thus cannot convert the provided SGML source to text.
>
> Any help will be appreciated,
>
> - J
--
Sam Roberts ([EMAIL PROTECTED]), Cogent Real-Time Systems (www.cogent.ca)
"News is very popular among its readers." - RFC 977 (NNTP)
On Sun, Apr 09, 2000 at 07:29:35PM +0100, Brian D. Winters wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Apr 05, 2000 at 10:45:15AM -0400, Sam Roberts wrote:
> > > I'd just like to have better control over when gpg tries to
> > > download keys, I wish it (or mutt) would ask "hey,
From: Brian D. Winters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: mutt-users <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2000 12:02 AM
Subject: Re: gpg always downloading sigs for signed mail...
> On Wed, Apr 05, 2000 at 10:45:15AM -0400, Sam Roberts wrote:
> > I'd just like to have be
Bingo! Thanks!
Sam
On Wed, Apr 05, 2000 at 12:48:58AM -0400, David T-G wrote:
> Sam --
>
> ...and then Sam Roberts said...
> % mutt says my /usr/spool/mail/sam spool file is read-only, any
> % idea why? It's only used for local-to-my-machine mail, but
> % I'd l
t doesn't already
> have it.
>
> -Bennett
yeah, that's the way it works for me too (gpg 1.0.1, mutt 1.0.1i).
I'd just like to have better control over when gpg tries to
download keys, I wish it (or mutt) would ask "hey, do you want
me to try and fetch this key from $keyserver?".
Not a deal breaker, though.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts, sroberts at uniserve dot com, www.emyr.net/Sam
From: Sebastian Helms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Hello,
>
> * Sam Roberts wrote on 04 Apr 2000:
>
> > I don't know if this is a gpg question, or a mutt one, but...
>
> a gpg one ;-)
>
> > I'd like mutt to not verify signatures that are not in
hen I'm
in that mailbox, but it's a little strange. Is some kind of
file-locking being triggered that's not working?
I'm using 1.0.1i, btw, on QNX4.
Sam
--
Sam Roberts, sroberts at uniserve dot com, www.emyr.net/Sam
ere a way to make it not
contact keyservers?
Sam
--
Sam Roberts, sroberts at uniserve dot com, www.emyr.net/Sam
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