On Sat, Jul 03, 2010 at 03:12:49PM +0200, lee wrote: > [snip] > > Let me add that you just got me to the idea that a simple yes/no for a > combination of recipients won't suffice: It would have to be > always/once/no/never, meaning that for the combination of recipients > in question, the requesting of reciepts would either always be enabled > or for that particular message only or no reciept for the particular > message will be requested or reciepts are never requested. > > No doubt that the kind of support for reciepts I have in mind could be > used otherwise, but how someone makes use of a feature is always up to > them.
The simplest thing (as others have already mentioned) is still using $edit_headers and implement that in your editor. Either directly or in a wrapper script (which could even be in C, but I would use something faster to develop, like Shell, Perl, Python, ..) used in $editor. It would check the mail after you exit the editor, and then ask you - based on a configuration file - if you want to add a request, and if yes add the necessary header. > [snip] > >> Wasted effort compared to an editor macro to add some line like >> "please acknowledge receipt and respond ASAP". > > What makes you think that the recipient would bother to write an > answer? It would involve even more overhead for them to manually write > and send a response than it is to use a feature of their MUA that > reduces the overhead to just pressing a single key --- or doesn't > involve any overhead at all for them because they have chosen to > always automatically send reciepts when requested. But if the recipient doesn't care about your mail, then how does adding a receipt request help? >> Practice has shown that it is not best practice. > > Because of poor support, maybe :) Or because it's a bad idea. Regarding the support of requests in mutt, adding it can (or should be; I haven't tried it and probably never will, I don't like them) easily be done with $display_filter. Just add a wrapper script which checks the mail for the header and if it contains one, displays a message in the mail. Then use a macro which pipes the mail to another script which sends the answer to the recipient. Simon -- + privacy is necessary + using gnupg http://gnupg.org + public key id: 0x92FEFDB7E44C32F9
pgpIkxIKkBahQ.pgp
Description: PGP signature