David and others,
On Sat, Sep 22, 2001 at 11:15:44PM -0400, David T-G wrote:
> % to the mail separation From_ line in mbox format and inserts the
> % quotation character itself automatically. I wonder if there is a way to
>
> Sure; switch to a mail folder format that doesn't require it. I hear
On Sun, Sep 23, 2001 at 03:15:29AM +0200, Piet Delport wrote:
> Vg unf znal boshfpngbel hfrf, enatvat sebz gur fvyyl gb gur fbzrjung
> frevbhf, fhpu nf cebgrpgvat fcbvyref be cbgragvnyyl bssrafvir grkg sebz
> pnfhny ernqvat va choyvp sbehzf. (Vg'f hfrq va arjftebhcf fhpu nf
> erp.uhzbe.* sbe aba-
On Sat, Sep 22, 2001 at 11:41:18PM +0200, Jens Paulus wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 20, 2001 at 09:21:52AM -0400, David T-G wrote:
> > Hey, rot13 is cool. Now for a rot13 filter in vim :-)
>
> >From the vim helpfile:
^
Hey, this is bad: what I just experienced is that after the trans
On Thu, Sep 20, 2001 at 09:21:52AM -0400, David T-G wrote:
> Hey, rot13 is cool. Now for a rot13 filter in vim :-)
>From the vim helpfile:
[snip]
|v_g?| {visual}g? perform rot13 encoding on highlighted text
|g?| g?{motion} perform rot13 encoding on the text that is moved o
On Sun, Aug 05, 2001 at 07:27:36PM +0200, Morten Brix Pedersen wrote:
> Users usually won't understand whats happening when you 'bounce' a mail
> to them, because it looks like its the original author who sent the
> e-mail.
>
> So, is there a "better" way forwarding e-mail with attachments?
I wo
On Mon, Jul 30, 2001 at 10:05:54AM +0800, Greg Matheson wrote:
> I just found it and am excited about it. However, it is for
> vim-6.0, which is still alpha, and if you compile vim with
> multibyte, a non-ASCII marker placed in the index breaks it, at
> least in my case. But you can munge this.
Hi,
this is no specific mutt question, maybe a general mail delivery or MTA
question instead, but I would still like to know it. Some mail programs
offer the user the chance to set a so-called "priority" to the message
before the email is sent away. For example, the recipient of an email
which wa
On Thu, Jul 26, 2001 at 12:12:11AM -0500, David Champion wrote:
> What if there were a merge-components function in the compose menu,
> such that you could tag 2 or more components ("attachments"), call this
> function, and have those tagged components merged as one?
>
> Would this (a) solve the
On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 11:40:11PM -0400, Walt Mankowski wrote:
> ;; Automatically go into mail-mode if filename starts with /tmp/mutt
> (setq auto-mode-alist (append (list (cons "^\/tmp\/mutt" 'mail-mode))
> auto-mode-alist))
[...]
> (add-hook 'mail-mode-hook 'my-mai
On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 08:18:35AM -0600, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 03:05:58PM +0200, Jens Paulus muttered:
> > quotation character '> ', then I can hit gqap or gqip and I have the
> > long line turned to a paragraph that has each line begi
On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 04:04:04PM +0100, John Arundel wrote:
> The only nice way I can think of for integrating this into mutt would be
> to have an 'append quoted message to postponed message' function.
>
> For example:
> * When writing a reply, you realise you want to quote another mail too
>
On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 03:25:15PM +0100, John Arundel wrote:
> Alternatively, you could save the received mail to a file and then read
> it into vim at the cursor with :r .
That's how I used to do it until now.
-Jens
On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 10:44:11AM -0700, Dominique Pelle wrote:
> How about attaching another mail to the email you want
> to send?
I know about this attach-message function. The disadvantage is that the
attached text is not in the current text and thus cannot be edited or
cut or referred to sen
Hello,
about a week ago I was posting some questions. Only one of three have
been replied to until now. That's why I decided to repost the unreplied
ones again.
1.) Editing an email with vim/mutt, I sometimes wish to insert/quote
text from another email that I'm not currently replying to. I reme
> Currently, that's the only way to do it.
>
> Of course, we could throw in a heuristic which doesn't set the r
> flag when the thread is broken up, that is, when the reply doesn't
> contain in-reply-to.
Wouldn't it be best to have a special function that does what pressing
'm' (in the index)
On Wed, Jul 18, 2001 at 08:45:49AM +0200, Thomas Roessler wrote:
> Why not reply to that person? Don't you want the "r" mark on the
> index, or do you just want to start a new thread? In the latter
I'd say both. I want to create a totally new message with no relation to
the chosen one.
> cas
Hi,
three questions:
1.) about emacs text editing,
2.) about mutt quoting text,
3.) about mutt composing a new message
1.) I'm using vim and don't know too much of emacs. One thing I find
very useful with vim is that if I want to wrap a very long quoted line
with width greater than 80 characters
Yes, line wrapping is the editor's job. I suggest to use "set tw=72" or
"set textwidth=72" in the config file. "set co=72" only sets the width
of the display (number of columns), but does no real line wrapping in
the text. In Vim, you may hit "gqap" or "gqip" to format the current
paragraph (to th
helps.
-Jens
On Mon, Jan 22, 2001 at 02:07:40PM +0100, Kai Blin wrote:
> * Wilhelm Wienemann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [19/01/01, 18:42:55]:
>
> > Why didn't read you the answers to the same question from
> > -------> cut here <
Hi there, I have two questions.
1.) How can I configure Mutt and teach it to display German umlauts? I could
not find any instructions in Mutt's manual about this topic. In the default
settings, it always replaces these special characters by a question mark (`?')
in the builtin pager and by a dot
Hi there,
I have two questions.
1.) How can I configure Mutt and teach it to display German umlauts? I could
not find any instructions in Mutt's manual how to do this. In the default
settings, it always replaces these special characters by a question mark (`?')
in the builtin pager and by a dot
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