On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 08:40:48PM +0200, Suvayu Ali wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 12:11:27PM -0400, Jon LaBadie wrote:
> > A mailing list I subscribe to is changing their host.
> > For a while messages will be received from both servers.
> > 
> > I would like that any replies I make automatically go
> > to the new server even if I'm replying to one from the
> > old server.
> > 
> > I tried a send-hook.  I already have others for setting
> > my sender's name and signature.
> > 
> > send-hook  'fool...@oldserver.org'  'my_hdr To: fool...@newserver.net'
> 
> Did you try a reply-hook?  I think that would be most appropriate here.
> Something like the following should work:
> 
> reply-hook "~C fool...@oldserver.org" my_hdr To: fool...@newserver.net
> 
> Hope this helps,
> 

Good thought, I had forgotten there was a 'reply-hook'.

I tried it and got the same results as with my 'send-hook' versions.
Variations I tried included with and without ~C and ~t, and dropping
the server part of the match, i.e.

  send-hook "~C foolist" 'my_hdr To: fool...@newserver.net'


One oddity.  After editing my .muttrc file, the first time I reply
to the list with an "L" the "To:" line is unchanged.  If I quit the
editor, abort the reply, and do a second "L", then the "To:" line
is modified by addition of the newserver address.  I.e. it becomes

  To: fool...@oldserver.org, fool...@newserver.net

It almost seems like some other setting is interacting with my
reply-hook (or send-hook line
is modified by addition of the newserver address.  I.e. it becomes

  To: fool...@oldserver.org, fool...@newserver.net

It almost seems like some other setting is interacting with my
reply-hook or send-hook.

Jon
-- 
Jon H. LaBadie                 j...@jgcomp.com
 11226 South Shore Rd.          (703) 787-0688 (H)
 Reston, VA  20190              (609) 477-8330 (C)

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