At some point hitherto, mike ledoux hath spake thusly: > On Mon, Jan 07, 2002 at 01:40:30PM -0500, Derek D. Martin wrote: > > There seems to be no way to make mutt include a forwarded message in > > quoted text. MUCH more often than not, that's the behavior I want, so > > that I can comment on what the original writer wrote. Maybe a way > > does exist, since it seems intuitive that people would want to do > > this, but I couldn't find a way. IIRC, Pine (for example) has a handy > > option for this. > > I'm not sure what you mean. When I forward a message, it prompts me if > I want to 'Forward MIME encapsulated'. If I answer 'n', the text of the > forwarded message appears in my editor. It isn't quoted, if that's what > you mean (it shows up between 'Forwarded message' indicators instead).
Ok, so I'm beginning to suspect that this, along with my .sig problem, may actually be caused by post.el - a mode for emacs to edit mail. I'm going to look into this. [SNIP] > text/html; /usr/bin/lynx -force_html %s; needsterminal > text/html; /usr/bin/lynx -dump -force_html %s; copiousoutput > > When I get HTML mail it automatically gets passed through lynx and > displayed in Mutt's pager. When I reply, the output of lynx is quoted > in my reply. The 'needsterminal' entry allows me to explicitly view > HTML mail in lynx, which I sometimes want to do. The need to do that never occured to me... How do you choose between them? > Pine's internal handling of HTML mail is much better than Mutt's. Agreed. > > Often when one sends an encrypted e-mail, one wants to send > > attachments too. Sometimes you want the attachment encrypted, and > > sometimes you don't (or actually, I ALWAYS do, but I can conceive of > > reasons why one might not, or at least not care). Mutt seems to do > > the latter by default, and there doesn't seem to be any way to do the > > former in mutt, other than to uuencode all the files manually, and > > paste them into the message that you're typing. This defeats the > > whole point of having PGP support, IMO. > > I'm not sure what you're saying here, either. Ok, I may be confused about this. Some of these things were items I'd jotted down a while back, meaning to ask about them some time ago, so I'm going from memory. I don't send encrypted mail with attachments all that often, so it's been a while since I had to deal with this one specifically. Next time I run into whatever this problem was, I'll ask again. ;-) -- Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------- I prefer mail encrypted with PGP/GPG! GnuPG Key ID: 0x81CFE75D Retrieve my public key at http://pgp.mit.edu Learn more about it at http://www.gnupg.org