Gary Johnson wrote: > > Well, currently, everything listed after a "--" is considered a > > recipient. You could maybe have a flag to change that so that > > everything listed after a -- is considered an attachment. > > Or, anything after -a and before any other token beginning with - is > considered an attachment. Examples:
[snip] This would seem the most logical solution to me. Either that, or do the globbing from mutt and specify mutt -a '*.png' [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] or so. Right now I don't see any other ways that would be nicer or easier. I don't think globbing necessarily has to be done by the shell if there is a good reason to do it from the program itself. However, I have run into problems before where the C "glob" function didn't expand across symbolic links to directories, even though the shell would. Using the shell might be more robust. Kind regards, Hein Zelle -- Unix is user friendly. It's just very particular about who it's friends are. Hein Zelle [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.icce.rug.nl/~hein