* Ken Weingold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [05/20/02 22:53]: > I have changed some aliases by unaliasing them then 'a' to define them > again. I noticed that in my mutt alias file, both are in there.
The 'unalias' command does the inverse of 'alias', ie removing an alias from the active Mutt session. But there is no inverse to the 'create-alias' function which creates an alias in a file. The problem is that you can define aliases anywhere, not just in a single file (multiple files sourced, during a running session, output of a script...). How could Mutt guess where the alias you want to remove has been defined? > Does mutt simply only take the last of duplicate aliases it finds in > the alias file? Yes, whenever it finds an already existing alias, it redefines it. -- Cedric