Dave Lorand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Tue, 15 Feb 2000:
> Well, there *was* a core file in my home directory, but it could have
> been from KDE for all I know.

At least on my system, I can see from which program the core was left
behind with "file core".  With gdb (or other debugger), it's probably
also possible to see the command line arguments etc., but file should
be sufficient for determining where the core came from.

> I deleted the core file, tried mutt -y
> again (after having done the c-?-tab from above) and viola! now it
> works.

Good to hear that. :-)

> I had never done c-?-tab from within mutt before, so my guess is that
> somehow mutt -y only works after that's been done once.  Very wierd.

Weird indeed.  Mutt doesn't save any sort of state information across
sessions (apart from the contents of the mail folders themselves).
There isn't even a feature to dump out the current state of all the
options and hooks even if you would *want* to, let alone store anything
automatically.  So, your executing c-?-tab certainly couldn't have
affected "mutt -y"; something else must have changed.

Does mutt -Z work properly now as well?


Regards,
Mikko
-- 
// Mikko Hänninen, aka. Wizzu  //  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  //  http://www.iki.fi/wiz/
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