On Thu, May 18, 2000 at 10:27:15AM +0800, billy chan wrote:
> [2000.05.17 15:55] Joan M. Garcia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > I would like to change mutt's behavior when, after pressing
> > two consecutive tabs when looking for a file or folder, it
> > shows me all the possible completions. It would be great if
> > it could show the candidates the way GNU readline usually
> > does (ls like, instead of ls -l like). The problem is that
> > I have arrow_cursor set, and when browsing files it is very
> > hard to know where it is pointing at (the arrow is on the
> > left, and the file name on the right). Is there a way to
> > change it?
>
> "set arrow_cursor=no" in .muttrc
>
I think he probably has arrow_cursor=yes for a reason, i.e. he likes
it that way or he's working across a slow connection. I personally
have arrow_cursor=yes because I like it that way, I have the arrow
cursor highlighted with a different background colour so it's very
easy to find.
The browser indexes are sometimes a little less than ideal, you can
however modify them with $folder_format, the only problem being that
one wants different formats (IMHO) for local and IMAP folders.
I also think that the default 'ls -l' type format for the browser is
far from ideal and rather a strange default.
--
Chris Green ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
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