On Sun, Feb 11, 2007 at 12:21:20PM -0500, Derek Martin wrote: > On Sun, Feb 11, 2007 at 09:19:48PM +1300, Chris Bannister wrote: > > The filenames are cryptic and knowing their name is not generally > > useful. > > The names are definitely cryptic, which is the whole point of asking > for a way to get them from mutt... Mutt knows what the names are. > However I would disagree that knowing the name is not useful. It is
Picky. Picky. Yeah, that is why I said "... not generally useful." > only not useful if you only ever manipulate your mail from within your > mail client. There are plenty of conceivable reasons to do so using a > plain text editor or command line tools (editing e-mail addresses > which have changed in a list of specific messages, quoting e-mails in > a non-email document, etc.). > > It may be possible to do some of these things within mutt, but it Well ... yeah, 'ESC b' for searching message bodies. > might be easier or more efficient to do them using other tools, if you > are already working on a bunch of files which are not e-mails, or you > are using other tools to work on the files directly to do things that > can not easily be done from within Mutt. Of course, you can pipe > messages to programs, but this is sometimes somewhat cumbersome, ^^^^^^^^^ > depending on what you're trying to do. I remember saying something about "depending on what you're trying to do." but it appears to have been snipped. -- Chris. ====== " ... the official version cannot be abandoned because the implication of rejecting it is far too disturbing: that we are subject to a government conspiracy of `X-Files' proportions and insidiousness." Letter to the LA Times Magazine, September 18, 2005.