On Thu, Feb 14, 2002 at 01:19:04AM +0300, Al Nikolov wrote: | On Wed, Feb 13, 2002 at 11:28:40AM -0500, dman wrote: | | > (excerpt from 'man muttrc') | | Yes, i HAD read it. OK, i'll formalize my question: | | What is the difference between 'subscribed' (and also 'known') list | and just 'known' list?
A "known" list is a list that you are not subscribed to. If you (or anyone) sends a messge to that list, you will not get a copy. The purpose of specifying these is so that your address can be added to Mail-Followup-To: which will cause compliant mailers to send you a direct copy in addition to posting to the list. A "subscribed" list is a list you are subscribed to. If you (or anyone) sends a message to the list, you will get a copy. The purpose is to _not_ put your address in Mail-Followup-To: so that you don't get a duplicate copy since you'll get the one sent to the list anyways. | Second, what is means: 'removes from known or subscribed'?? Mutt keeps a data structure for the "lists" addresses and the "subscribe" addresses. If you want to remove an address from either of those data structures, use that command. | May be i seem stupid, show me an example of use. It doesn't really make sense to me to use them in a config file since you can just remove the line where you add the address and get the same effect. I guess they exist so you can modify the state of a running instance of mutt without needing to restart it to remove an address from the data structure. I can imagine it being useful only in the case where you want to test out some variations on the address. -D -- The wise in heart are called discerning, and pleasant words promote instruction. Proverbs 16:21