> On Sat, May 13, 2000 at 11:43:52AM +0800, I wrote:

> > I had the opposite problem [to Chris Green who always wanted
> > the browser to go back to $folder, rather than the last
> > directory he had been in]. I wanted to get back to the place
> > in the mailboxes screen I had just been ...

So,
> > folder-hook . 'macro index h <change-folder>?<tab><jump><enter>0<enter>'
> > folder-hook '!' 'macro index h <change-folder>?<tab><jump><enter>1<enter>'
> > folder-hook =tn 'macro index h <change-folder>?<tab><jump><enter>2<enter>'

On Sat, May 13, 2000 at 04:51:34PM +0200, Michael Tatge wrote in
reply:

> I'm not sure if I understand you correctly. This way to are only able
> to go from one folder to a specific other one. 

That's right. The same one. From the one in the index to the same
one in the mailboxes screen. That's the way I want it. When I go
from the index to the mailboxes screen, I want the cursor to be
on the folder whose index I was just looking at, the same way
when you go from looking at an email in the pager to the index,
you get the index corresponding to the folder the email was in. 

Without these macros, <change-folder>?<tab> always puts the cursor
back on the first mailbox, usually the spoolfile.

> So folder-hook =tn 'macro index h c=whatever mailbox #2 is in
> you example' would do the same, right? 

No, this would put you in the index screen not the mailboxes
screen. It would be the index for mailbox #2, which
is just =tn in my case, so would do nothing. 

I use the mailbox screen to work through the new emails I get in
order. It gives me a rough idea of how much new email I have.
Another good thing to have would be numbers of mails like there
are in the index, but I am prepared to do without.

-- 
Greg Matheson                          Learn a third language 
Chinmin College, Taiwan                and be born again again
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                   

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