I just got email with an attachment type
[text/english, base64, us-ascii, 3.5K]
What would be an appropriate mailcap entry?
Did you disable fcntl-style locking when building Mutt?
-Clint
On Mar 14, Eric Boehm wrote:
>
> I have found that mutt 1.1.9 is about 4x slower reading a 7.4 MB mail
> file with 1451 messages in it than mutt 1.0.
>
> I tried this several times to eliminate the effects of caching. It took
> mut
Erik Thiele <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Fri, 24 Mar 2000:
> i think the best item for a YAO, that would also solve
> the "Compressed Folders and the "N" flag" thread would be:
>
> real_check_not_only_atime
>
> it means that mutt doesn't examine the atime of the folder
> but instead looks inside
On Fri, Mar 24, 2000 at 06:57:54AM -0600, Jason Helfman wrote:
> > My only complaint with Mutt is you can't (I think) hilite the index
> > by subject. I'd like to have the different mailing lists that I'm on
> > have a different color. I've only been able to hilite by status.
> > new, deleted,
Now that I appear to be learning my way around mutt, I thought I should
contribute the following pair of macros, suitable for folks on this list
:-)
send-hook . 'set attribution="On %d, %n wrote:"'
send-hook mutt- 'set attribution="On %d, %n muttered:"'
--
-- C^2
No windows
On Fri, Mar 24, 2000 at 06:57:54AM -0600, Jason Helfman wrote:
> ! Erik Jarvi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [240300 06:54]:
> > On Thu, Mar 23, 2000 at 09:30:29AM -0600, Jason Helfman wrote:
> > > Well you can use the system defaults, by using the "?" key. But I
> > > believe it is "C" to copy the message
I've noticed that the colors that look great in an xterm on my home
machine don't look so good in a teraterm window running in windows
here at work. Has anyone found a good color scheme that is effective,
easy on the eyes, and preferably uses a black background?
jm
--
--
Hi,
My turn to have a question. :-) Since I seem to answer questions about
send-hooks, $reverse_name, my_hdr From: etc., I thought I should try to
finally adapt my own .muttrc files to using "set from=" instead of
"my_hdr From:".
I ran into a problem though. I simply replaced each "my_hdr From
Thanks guys! Got it all worked out.
jm
--
Jonathon McKitrick -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The spice must flow
! Erik Jarvi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [240300 06:54]:
> On Thu, Mar 23, 2000 at 09:30:29AM -0600, Jason Helfman wrote:
> > Well you can use the system defaults, by using the "?" key. But I
> > believe it is "C" to copy the message to another folder.
>
> Thanks for the info.
> I figured it out. "s" fo
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000, Gero Reichard wrote:
> > > :0
> > > * ^TO_:.*mutt-users.
> > > |gzip -c $s >> ~/Mail/mutt-users.gz
> Until now I never had problems with loosing mail. So I didnt need
> any "lock". BTW: Should I lock? What? Why? (As long as I'm the only
> person on my computer..)
Above you
> i thought it would come down to some script with procmail/formail, but was
> hoping that there's a "one key solution" from within mutt. but the examples
> from the procmailex manpage seem to be very interesting though. i will try
> the solution from .procmailrc that checks every mail automatic
> > > ~/.procmailrc:
> > > :0
> > > * ^TO_:.*mutt-users.
> > > |gzip -c $s >> ~/Mail/mutt-users.gz
> Until now I never had problems with loosing mail. So I didnt need any
> "lock". BTW: Should I lock? What? Why? (As long as I'm the only
> person on my computer..)
Just add the second colon at
On Thu, Mar 23, 2000 at 11:16:45PM +0200, Mikko Hänninen wrote:
> Erik Thiele <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Thu, 23 Mar 2000:
> > mark_old:
> > i use standard unix mail folders.
> > unset mark_old
> > does what i want. but in mutt -y overview mode, the folders with
> > new messages inside won't be
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