--- Jeff Breidenbach <jeff@jab.org> wrote: > Folks at Debian (including me) are speculating as to when mhonarc > 2.5.0 might be released and/or whether it makes any sense for Debian > to ship 2.5.0b2. The question is somewhat influenced by Debian's very > long release cycle which will roll over within a few months. So -- > would you be interested in sharing a guesstimated timeline for mhonarc > releases up to and including 2.5.0?
2.5.0 should be released sometime soon. There were some recent patches submitted related to Japanese text processing, and some confirmation on some items need to be done before 2.5.0 release is done. > Regardless of Debian's choice, I'm quite happy personally using > mhonarc 2.5.0b2. Performance seems comparable to 2.4.x series, and > I've seen no problems so far, and really like the thread slices. BTW, you may be interested in the following note I added to the TSLICE docs for 2.5.0: NOTE The value of the TSLICE resource is used to determine the number of messages to update, before and after by thread, when a new message is added. To insure that messages within a thread slice are updated when a new message is added, make sure the before and after ranges specified for TSLICE is equal to maximum before and the maximum after range arguments specifed in the uses of the $TSLICE$ resource variable. For example, if you have $TSLICE(0;4)$ and $TSLICE(3;3)$ in message layout resources, you should set TSLICE to 3:4. If you only use $TSLICE$ once, it is best to set options for thread slice formatting via the TSLICE resource so you will not have anything to worry about. Jeff, I did not notice the above issue until after I sent you a patched resource file using $TSLICE$. To summarize the note above: Some message pages may not get properly updated to reflect changes in $TSLICE$ listing. This can occur if the message is more than one message away from a new message in a thread. I consider it not a major problem since the next/prev links still function properly. However, older messages may not properly show the latest slice representation, and as the reader goes through the thread, the slice listing can appear to grow as they go from older messages to newer messages. --ewh ===== Earl Hood, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <http://www.earlhood.com/> __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Listen to your Yahoo! Mail messages from any phone. http://phone.yahoo.com