On Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 12:48:16AM +0300, Dennis Yurichev wrote:
>
> Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
> all emails from some specific email address and to draw a statistical
> chart answering to question: what hours correspondent is most active in?
The followi
On 10-Aug-10 01:15, Chip Camden wrote:
> Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
> all emails from some specific email address and to draw a statistical
> chart answering to question: what hours correspondent is most active in?
I went for the simple shell only command
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 06:18:04PM -0500, David Champion wrote:
> If we're actually going to revisit this in -dev, I'll reiterate my
> suggestion from back then:
>
> mutt -a { *.jpg } $RECIPIENT
>
> I don't think that needing to attach files named '{' or '}' from the
> command line is a very comm
Quoth Chip Camden on Monday, 09 August 2010:
> Quoth Dennis Yurichev on Tuesday, 10 August 2010:
> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > On 10-Aug-10 01:15, Chip Camden wrote:
> > >> Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
> > >> all emails from
Quoth Dennis Yurichev on Tuesday, 10 August 2010:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On 10-Aug-10 01:15, Chip Camden wrote:
> >> Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
> >> all emails from some specific email address and to draw a statistical
> >>
* On 09 Aug 2010, Derek Martin wrote:
>
> $ mutt [...] -a "`echo *|tr ' ' \"$DELIMITER\""` $RECIPIENT
>
> or something of the sort. Of course, then you have either the
> spaces-in-filenames problem, or the delimiter-in-filenames problem.
> Or both.
If we're actually going to revisit this i
Thank Erik, and suggestion to Jeff,
Before the bug is fixed, I suggest going back to mutt 1.5.18.
I found it has an extra benefit - it opens mailbox much faster than
1.5.20. I don't know why, but you can benchmark it. (I have some
mailboxes of size 1-200MB. The time-saving for the
On Tue, Aug 03, 2010 at 02:00:46PM +, Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2010-08-02, Nicolas Williams wrote:
>
> > Right. There's no good convention for "end of list of arguments to an
> > option". There's only a good convention for "end of variable argument
> > list" ('--'), and since this is the c
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 11:26:07PM +0100, Chris G wrote:
+USE_DOTLOCK +DL_STANDALONE +USE_FCNTL -USE_FLOCK
but does that mean that to co-operate with mutt another process *has*
to use dotlock and fcntl? ... and, if so, what order should one do
things in?
dotlock first, then fcntl
Erik Christiansen wrote about open ticket items
related to the "new mail" reporting bug:
Erik:
Thanks for the information. It looks like this is a similar problem. I
hope that this can get addressed soon as it is a real hassle, and I cannot
go back to mutt 1.4 because there is a serious 256-ch
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 06:18:41PM -0400, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
> * Chris G [08-09-10 18:11]:
> > Can anyone point me at some code that shows how I should do mbox
> > locking in a way that will work with mutt?
> >
> > This is on an Ubuntu 9.10 (probably soon 10.04) system.
> >
> > I need to kn
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 10-Aug-10 01:15, Chip Camden wrote:
>> Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
>> all emails from some specific email address and to draw a statistical
>> chart answering to question: what hours correspondent is most ac
* Chris G [08-09-10 18:11]:
> Can anyone point me at some code that shows how I should do mbox
> locking in a way that will work with mutt?
>
> This is on an Ubuntu 9.10 (probably soon 10.04) system.
>
> I need to know what locking calls I must make (fcntl, or lockf, or
> what), do I need to do
Quoth Dennis Yurichev on Tuesday, 10 August 2010:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Hi.
>
> Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
> all emails from some specific email address and to draw a statistical
> chart answering to question: what hours c
Quoth Chris G on Monday, 09 August 2010:
> On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 02:23:17PM -0700, Chip Camden wrote:
> > Quoth Chris G on Monday, 09 August 2010:
> > > On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 09:20:05PM +0100, Chris G wrote:
> > > [snip my mutt/mbox/NFS issues]
> > >
> > > Can someone clarify something for me
Can anyone point me at some code that shows how I should do mbox
locking in a way that will work with mutt?
This is on an Ubuntu 9.10 (probably soon 10.04) system.
I need to know what locking calls I must make (fcntl, or lockf, or
what), do I need to do dot-locking as well, what is the necessary
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi.
Is there any plugin or script which is able to collect time stamps of
all emails from some specific email address and to draw a statistical
chart answering to question: what hours correspondent is most active in?
- --
My PGP public key: http://y
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 02:23:17PM -0700, Chip Camden wrote:
> Quoth Chris G on Monday, 09 August 2010:
> > On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 09:20:05PM +0100, Chris G wrote:
> > [snip my mutt/mbox/NFS issues]
> >
> > Can someone clarify something for me please, ignore NFS and assume I'm
> > running mutt an
Quoth Chris G on Monday, 09 August 2010:
> On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 09:20:05PM +0100, Chris G wrote:
> [snip my mutt/mbox/NFS issues]
>
> Can someone clarify something for me please, ignore NFS and assume I'm
> running mutt and the mail delivery agent on the same system on a local
> hard disk.
>
>
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 09:20:05PM +0100, Chris G wrote:
[snip my mutt/mbox/NFS issues]
Can someone clarify something for me please, ignore NFS and assume I'm
running mutt and the mail delivery agent on the same system on a local
hard disk.
If I open my inbox with mutt and leave it displaying the
I'm having problems getting mutt and a python script to play nicely
together with an mbox format mailbox. I get different symptoms
according to whether mutt is accessing the mailbox directly or via NFS.
If I open the mbox file with mutt and have mutt displaying the index
of messages and then the
This was buried deep in a thread, so I am reposting for wider publication.
Several people have complained that when selected text in the pager that there
is extra space at the end of pasted blocks. This test program is to help
diagnose the problem.
me
/*
* A test program which demostrates t
On Mon, Aug 09, 2010 at 12:20:00AM +0800, Charles Jie wrote:
> You said: "if I do anything that changes the inbox file, such as
> deleting a message, then the Gnome mail monitor sees this change and
> begins indicating that there is new mail". This is a good discovery. It
> looks that mutt 1.5.20 f
23 matches
Mail list logo