Suresh --
...and then V. Suresh said...
%
% Hi All,
Hello!
% In mutt, after I create a message, when I press 'y' to send it
% Mutt asks me that ' -so-so- file has been modified. Update encoding(yes/no)'.
mutt checks the timestamps to see how the file is doing, and w
Hi All,
In mutt, after I create a message, when I press 'y' to send it
Mutt asks me that ' -so-so- file has been modified. Update encoding(yes/no)'.
Either I click y or n, the message is sent. No problems with that. But I want
to know which variable I have to set to stop
Hardy --
...and then Hardy Merrill said...
%
% David T-G [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
% >
...
% > This just came up recently; you can check the archives for the full
% > discussion. Is your home dir NFS mounted and are you experience clock
% > difference problems between machines?
%
% Yes, that
David T-G [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> Hardy --
>
> ...and then Hardy Merrill said...
> %
> ...
> %~/.mutt/tmp/mutt-merrill-1234-0 [#1] modified. Update encoding? ([y]/n):
> %
> % Am I doing something wrong, or have a forgotten something in the
> % config of m
Hardy --
...and then Hardy Merrill said...
%
...
%~/.mutt/tmp/mutt-merrill-1234-0 [#1] modified. Update encoding? ([y]/n):
%
% Am I doing something wrong, or have a forgotten something in the
% config of mutt?
This just came up recently; you can check the archives for the full
discussion
I recently changed configs - I'm now using fetchmail/procmail/mutt,
and when I compose a message in mutt, I get this message when
I try to send it:
~/.mutt/tmp/mutt-merrill-1234-0 [#1] modified. Update encoding? ([y]/n):
Am I doing something wrong, or have a forgotten something in the
c
02-Apr-02 at 17:16, Adam Shostack ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote :
> The client's clock is running a few minutes behind the server. You
> write the file at local noon, which the server sets to be 12:03. Mutt
> checks the file, sees that its mtime is in the future (12:03 being
> later than 12:00), and
Sadiq Al-Lawatia wrote:
> The home directories are indeed nfs mounted. And after a little chat
> with the system administrator, it turns out the problem is exactly as
> Adam has suggested in his reply about the clocks not running at the
> same time.
>
> So I guess there is nothing I can do, unl
Quoting Kyle Rawlins ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> I notice that the tmp directory is somewhere under the home directory so could
> possibly be nfs mounted - if there is a time skew between the server and the
> computer running mutt this could potentially cause problems too. I am having a
> hard time ex
Adam Shostack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> The client's clock is running a few minutes behind the server. You
> write the file at local noon, which the server sets to be 12:03. Mutt
> checks the file, sees that its mtime is in the future (12:03 being
> later than 12:00), and warns you.
I gues
On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 05:02:02PM -0500, Kyle Rawlins wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 01:04:24PM -0600, David DeSimone wrote:
> > Sadiq Al-Lawatia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > > "~/Mail/tmp/mutt-csce-4803-30 [#1] modified. Update encoding?
> &
On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 01:04:24PM -0600, David DeSimone wrote:
> Sadiq Al-Lawatia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > "~/Mail/tmp/mutt-csce-4803-30 [#1] modified. Update encoding?
> > ([yes]/no): "
>
> So, the mystery here is, why does Mutt think that
Sadiq Al-Lawatia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> "~/Mail/tmp/mutt-csce-4803-30 [#1] modified. Update encoding?
> ([yes]/no): "
This message indicates that the time-stamp on the file has been changed
since Mutt last saw you write to the file.
That is, when Mutt launc
Sadiq --
...and then Sadiq Al-Lawatia said...
%
% Hello Everyone,
Hello!
%
% I have been using mutt for abour 4 years now. Very happy with it I
% must say. Anyways, my system adminstrator had just updated mutt to
% 1.3.24i (2001-11-29) and since then, everytime I send a message either
I'm a
hit send:
"~/Mail/tmp/mutt-csce-4803-30 [#1] modified. Update encoding?
([yes]/no): "
How can I get rid of it? Its annoying to hit 'y' everytime I want to
send an email, and besides, I do not see any difference in emails even
when I hit n!
Thanx for your help.
--Sadiq
List:
I'm using mutt under Win95/Cygwin.
When I finish composing a message, I am occasionally asked if I want to
update encoding.
Looking at the source code, it appears that it's asking me if I want to
convert between two different encodings.--is that 8-bit vs 7-bit?
However, I
On Wed, Mar 29, 2000 at 10:45:23PM +0900, Sam Alleman wrote:
> Can anyone tell me what this message is all about:
>
> ~~/tmp/mutt-xena-22566-0 [#1] modified. Update encoding? ([y]/n):
>
> What does this mean, and is there any way to bypass this question?
My guess is that mutt
Hello again,
Can anyone tell me what this message is all about:
~~/tmp/mutt-xena-22566-0 [#1] modified. Update encoding? ([y]/n):
What does this mean, and is there any way to bypass this question?
Thanks.
Sam
Hello group,
I got an answer on this from Sandy Herring <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
This error results when tmpdir is pointing into the $HOME directory
space. Setting tmpdir to /tmp fixed the problem.
Regards,
Seraphim
--
__
Seraphim Larsen [EMAIL PROTE
Hello,
I've scoured the manual and just can't find this.
Whenever I reply to a message, and include the original message
(and edit it), finally I am ready to send it.
I save and exit the editor, and hit "y" (to send).
It always asks me:
"(attachment #1) modified
This concerns mutt 0.95.6i.
If you attach a file which has been updated between the moment when it was
attached and the actual sending, mutt will notify you of the change and
before sending ask you: "/somefile [#2] modified. Update encoding? ([y]/n):"
Then answering "n&qu
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