On Sat, Feb 10 2007 16:20, Travis H. wrote:
> Anyone have any thoughts on the wisdom of this?
>
> Also, is there a canonical naming scheme? I use a leading period
> for mailboxes that don't receive new mail (i.e. my outbox and
> spam folders)... But I see Maildir++ uses those for subfolders,
> an
So...
I was just reading the Maildir++ spec and it mentioned that it
supports subfolders. This is strange, as I have mutt using
subfolders with vanilla Maildir. I'm using the following
commands to automatically generate the mailbox list:
echo '# Autogenerated by $HOME/bin/mailboxes' > $HOME/.mu
On Fri, Feb 09, 2007 at 04:18:20PM +0100, Michelle Konzack wrote:
> Here is it more weird since if I login, and procmail has sorted some
> messages to "/new" subdir of my maildir, mutt will detect the messages
> and if I enter the Mailfolder with mutt. it move it IMMEDIATLY to "/cur"
> ecen if I do
Some of you may remember me struggling with redraw problems in
Terminal.app.
On Fri, Nov 24, 2006 at 10:10:55AM +, Michael Williams wrote:
> I'm having redraw problems in OS X's Terminal.app, and would welcome
> suggestions or solutions. The screen looks something like this:
>
> http://img1
On Fri, Feb 09, 2007 at 10:43:10AM -0500, David Haguenauer wrote:
> I would suggest looking for it my Message-ID: `grep ^Message.*XXX -r
> $MAILDIR' should do the job (with XXX replaced with the actual
> Message-ID and $MAILDIR your actual Maildir).
... That's what I was trying to avoid... anyway,
On Mon, Feb 05, 2007 at 08:34:32PM -0800, Bill wrote:
> I've found that hitting 'v' in mutt's mail browser, and then typing
> uppercase 'T' (while the text portion of the message is selected),
> opens, what for me is a cleaner rendering of a message.
>
> Is there anyway to implement this from mutt