On Fri, 18 Jan 2019 12:02:36 +0100, Vegard Svanberg wrote:
> * m...@raf.org [2019-01-02 05:37]:
>
>> > > When I copy text from Mutt into whatever else (vim, text
>> editor, browser
>> > > textarea... doesn't matter), the paste includes the (trailing) spaces
>> > > (\s) from column 80-120, so I
* Vegard Svanberg [2019-01-18 12:05]:
> There was a suggestion in there to #undef HAVE_BKGDSET in config.h, but
> that didn't make any difference for me. There was also a reference to
> the ol' trac at dev.mutt.org, but that site isn't online anymore.
Err, I'm an idiot. Of course that fixed it
* m...@raf.org [2019-01-02 05:37]:
> > > When I copy text from Mutt into whatever else (vim, text editor, browser
> > > textarea... doesn't matter), the paste includes the (trailing) spaces
> > > (\s) from column 80-120, so I have to manually remove them.
>
> for me it happens when mutt is in
Felix Finch wrote:
> On 20190101, Vegard Svanberg wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Happy New Year!
> >
> > I have a problem that's been bugging me for years:
> >
> > Let's say the terminal window is appr. 120 characters wide. The email
> > I'm reading is ~80 chars wide. In other words, columns 80-120
I just used X select to select two lines from your message, running inside
tmux, and paste them into emacs. It pasted in the two lines with no extraneous
spaces on either line. The selection highlighted the full width of both lines,
210 columns. I don't know what I am doing differently, but
Hi,
Happy New Year!
I have a problem that's been bugging me for years:
Let's say the terminal window is appr. 120 characters wide. The email
I'm reading is ~80 chars wide. In other words, columns 80-120 are blank.
When I copy text from Mutt into whatever else (vim, text editor, browser