Felix Finch writes: > On 20200405, Sam Kuper wrote: > > In the meantime, you can just reply to the message (which, after all, > > was sent as an email): "Thanks, I accept your invitation to the meeting > > at 5pm PDT on 5th May 2020." > > Now that's an idea I hadn't considered! I was thinking more about the > calendar program keeping tabs on who had accepted or not. But you're right, > no need to emulate that. Just reply to the human.
Aside from the question of how to reply to calendar invites, my problem is seeing them in the first place. I don't get calendar attachments often, but when I do, I never know they're there. This happens for two reasons: 1. Mutt shows attachments at the bottom of a message, which was reasonable in the days before everyone top-posted; but now I never get anywhere near the end of a message, so if there's an image or a calendar invite attached, I never find out. (For images I find out later when people reply "Wow, amazing photo!" after I've already deleted the original message.) 2. Calendar invites are often part of a MIME multipart/alternative: I 1 <no description> [multipa/alternativ, 7bit, 17K] I 2 ├─><no description> [text/plain, quoted, iso-8859-1, 0.4K] I 3 ├─><no description> [text/html, quoted, iso-8859-1, 1.0K] I 4 └─><no description> [text/calendar, base64, utf-8, 15K] Mutt sensibly shows me the text/plain part, and I never know that there's also a calendar attachment. It seems broken that the calendar attachment would be part of the multipart/alternative when clearly you want to see both the text or HTML AND the calendar, but that's Microsoft for you (the invites have headers like "x-ms-exchange-calendar-series-instance-id:" so I'm guessing it's Exchange doing this). Is there any way to configure mutt to alert me at the top of the message if there are any text/calendar or image/* attachments anywhere in the message, even as part of a multipart/alternative? I feel like I miss a lot in mail messages because mutt doesn't tell me about attachments. ...Akkana