r 10, 1997.
[1]
http://www.filewatcher.com/b/ftp/ftp.42.org/pub/OLD/m/mutt/old/orig/devel-0.html
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Brandon Sandrowicz
:
: web => http://brandon.sandrowicz.org
: github => http://github.com/bsandrow
: twitter => @bsandrow
: email => bran...@sandrowicz.org
B printer, so where is the lpr coming from ?
>
> Ed
lpr is a line printer command, IIRC. It's blowing up because the command
does not exist (not installed), or is not in your $PATH. Why it's
attempting to use lpr instead of CUPS is probably down to a
configuration issue.
--
Brandon Sandrowicz
or
IMAP server, and store it locally, then you need to configure that
software to run the email through a filter (e.g. procmail).
[1] https://github.com/lefcha/imapfilter
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Brandon Sandrowicz
On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 10:58:37AM +0800, horseriver wrote:
> hi:
>
>How to edit my .procmailrc to put mails from different mail list into
> different maildir?
>
>can this work :
>:0
>* ^to: mutt-users@mutt.org
>mutt-users@mutt.org
>
> thanks
This is a configuration that I u
$ dpkg-query -S /etc/Muttrc.d/gpg.rc
mutt: /etc/Muttrc.d/gpg.rc
There's nothing to be gained by reading them.
[ Btw, mutt will parse ~/.mutt/muttrc if ~/.muttrc doesn't exist. If you
dot-prefix your ~/mutt, then you could axe the need for the symlink. ]
--
Brandon Sandrowicz
pdated that
info, then the redraw doesn't change anything. I didn't bother to trace
all of the places that Mutt decides to update the buffy lists from
though. You might try pager_index_lines and see if Mutt decides to keep
up-to-date when your pager is displaying the partial index.
--
Brandon Sandrowicz
ailbox. When unset,
Mutt will notify you if any new mail exists in the mailbox,
regardless of whether you have visited it recently.
When $mark_old is set, Mutt does not consider the mailbox to contain
new mail if only old messages exist.
--
Brandon Sandrowicz
:
: web => http://brandon.sandrowicz.org
: email => bran...@sandrowicz.org
: phone => +1 647 960 3722
On Sun, Apr 03, 2011 at 02:11:13PM +0300, thierry stephan wrote:
> Le 03/04/11 13:57, Mark Foxwell a écrit :
> >On 03/04/11 07:08, thierry stephan wrote:
> >>Mutt is working well, except to send emails !!!
> >>I try with :
> >>
> >>- smtp_url
> >>- set sendmail
> >
> >I use msmtp to send mails from
On Fri, Apr 01, 2011 at 04:18:29PM -0500, David Champion wrote:
> To read such a message you need a program that is rfc2822-aware and
> handled both HTML rendering and content-id chasing, or a view wrapper
> that can save your message and all content-id attachments together (e.g.
> to a directory)
On Sat, Mar 19, 2011 at 03:37:21PM +0100, Christian Ebert wrote:
> * Veljko on Saturday, March 19, 2011 at 14:37:17 +0100
> > I set up my mailcap for various types of files, but some of them are not
> > recognized properly and it just says "application/octet-stream" despite
> > the fact it is .jpg
On Fri, Jan 21, 2011 at 04:42:58PM -0900, Tim Johnson wrote:
> I have been using 1.5.19 with the sidebar path for some time now.
> I just downloaded version 1.5.21, which I presume to be the current
> stable version.
>
> Where are instructions for the sidebar patch for this version?
>
> Note: I d
On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 10:59:01PM +0100, Jose M Vidal wrote:
> None of the possibilities is actually working.
> But at least I have clues enough to go deeper with .mailcap options,
> which I clearly ned to learn,
> Thanks again.
>
> >
> > actually, forget my previous answer. It might work for thi
On Thu, Dec 23, 2010 at 10:06:48PM +0100, Kirill Miazine wrote:
> * Michael Tatge [2010-12-23 11:51]:
> >* On Tue, Dec 07, 2010 05:37PM + seanh (snh...@gmail.com) muttered:
> >>I'm trying to emulate Thunderbird 3's mail archiving behaviour in mutt. In
> >>Thunderbird if you select a mail or mai
On Tue, Dec 14, 2010 at 02:15:33PM +0100, Niels den Otter wrote:
> On Tuesday, 14 December 2010, Harry Strongburg wrote:
> > I am trying to send an email to a literal IPv6 address in mutt and
> > it does not work for me. "To: t...@[2001:470::::1]", as an
> > example. This won't work though
On Wed, Dec 08, 2010 at 11:35:07PM +0100, Francesco de Virgilio wrote:
> Hi guys,
> this time I've a question devoted to paranoic privacy settings with
> mutt. My machine configuration:
>
> - Ubuntu 10.10
> - /home encrypted with ecryptfs
> - /tmp is a directory clearly readable by anyone having a
On Tue, Dec 07, 2010 at 05:37:29PM +, seanh wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I'm trying to emulate Thunderbird 3's mail archiving behaviour in mutt. In
> Thunderbird if you select a mail or mails and hit the archive button or press
> the 'a' key then it moves the mail(s) into an archive folder. For each acco
t I should ... Hm, it works when the '*' is escaped, but still
> displays the current message.
>
>
> macro index .a "unmailboxes * \
> mailboxes \`mutt-mb -line 4
> ~/Mail\`"
It's the space that you have in there. That space is just like you
hitting the space bar while sitting in the index (since after the first
there is command being constructed).
--
Brandon Sandrowicz
all the time, but in a general sense (for desktop
use) it's not used. The spool would just fill up with such messages and
no one would be looking at them.
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Brandon Sandrowicz
email: bsand...@gmail.com
cell: +1 503 481 3865
maildir] i need
> to use postfix or maildrop. For a newbie the Postfix seems easier to
> set up or i can't find a decent doc on maildrop.
Are you wanting to do filtering beyond what you are doing with Gmail's
filtering? Or are you trying to subvert the web interface altogether?
This matters to answering your question.
> Be grateful if you could comment on my deliberations!!
>
> thanks
> james
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Brandon Sandrowicz
email: bsand...@gmail.com
cell: +1 503 481 3865
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