Hi, yes, absolutely; ~b stas does find stas
What I mean is that when I am in my inbox folder, I usually have to look for an email from somebody; what I usually do is to look for that somebody and then order the folder according to the sender, this way I can quickly look for the email I was looking for. Whilst in inbox this is as easy as "/ stas <enter> oo", in sent, when I do "/ stas <enter>" mutt doesn't find anything even if I have 250 emails from that person. Since the only obvious difference between inbox and sent is that "To:" field, I thought this could be the problem. In any case, now I have set default_hook="(~f %s !~P) | (~P ~C %s) | ~s %s" in my muttrc and still "/ stas" does not yield any result. I don't understand the ~s part of it, what's is it piping into? Thanks, Pau PS: Of course, I can always do ~ b stas, but I like to understand what the problem is 2007/12/5, Kyle Wheeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On Wednesday, December 5 at 12:03 AM, quoth Nicolas Rachinsky: > >* Kyle Wheeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007-12-04 16:39 -0600]: > >> Searching in any index (sent, inbox, whatever) relies on the value of > >> $default_hook, which defaults to "~f %s !~P | (~P ~C %s)". > > > >I think you mean $simple_search with the default "~f %s | ~s %s". > > Right! Sorry, my mistake. > > ~Kyle > - -- > He who dares not offend cannot be honest. > -- Thomas Paine > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Comment: Thank you for using encryption! > > iD8DBQFHVd9/BkIOoMqOI14RArtWAKDdpwuS+SEfC23WHf5NKMH1dgpJrwCgpaRG > wssRcSWme4EGCEzHfBIrvso= > =ojUG > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- >