No Christian, perhpas it not clear enough.

If course they are pseudo headers.

So in my vim when composing (usually large) emails. I develop a
collection of *pseudo* headers like in the block below.
Then I copy and paste these in the text with descriptions and
comments relevant to each header.

So I want to copy and paste a grammatically more useful *pseudo*
header text. Of course mutt could be made to accept anything
unique as this pseudo header, so I asked if it is changeable
without a hack of the source.

Thats all.

-- 
Eric Smith

Christian Brabandt wrote on Tue-20-Nov 12  5:12PM
> On Tue, November 20, 2012 17:07, Eric Smith wrote:
> >
> > So when I write emails I refer to the attachments.
> >
> > I copy and paste the list of headers as a block like this;
> > Attach: Foobar.baz
> > Attach: Foobar_1.baz
> > Attach: Foobar_2.baz
> >
> > into my text and reference them in a way that it is more professional and
> > grammatical to say "Attached" rather than "Attach"
> 
> Well, we are talking about a pseudo-header here. It is not visible in your
> mail and only used by mutt internally to detect which files need to be
> attached. Those headers won't end up in your sent mail.
> 
> So you can consider it as a request to mutt to simply Attach those files.
> 
> regards,
> Christian

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