On Thu, 2002-04-11 at 19:20, Shawn McMahon wrote: > begin Jeffrey W. Baker quotation: > > > > * Delete mail > > d > > > * Purge mail > > Exit, or change folders. You might like this: > > macro index I "<change-folder>!\r" > > which changes to the main mailbox, thus invoking the purge question > (unless you've set it to not purge in your config file.) > > > * Undelete mail > > u
I'm sure that would be it, if I could select the deleted messages. When I use the up/down arrow to navigate, the cursor skips 'D' messages. Thus I can't undelete them. This reminds my of elm. > > * Reply! > > r And, what is the version without all the questions? I put 'set fast_reply' in .muttrc but it didn't get rid of the questions. > RTFM before you run programs, or you'll break something. This ain't > Windows, where you can't do anything harmful (or useful). That's good, because I haven't used Windows since 1994 and I'd be kind of lost... > As for the "beginner's guide", try http://www.mutt.org. See, that's what I'm talking about. Everybody says how great mutt is but I can't even start using it without reading a long manual. I can change to my imap mailboxes using 'c', but I can't figure out how to put them in .muttrc so that they get checked at startup. It isn't the 'mailboxes' directove, either, because I already tried that. When I installed Slackware Linux the very first time, I only had to read a small HOWTO and I was off to the races. Mutt presents a bigger hurdle than installing that OS, which sucks a little bit. -jwb -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]