On Wed, Nov 22, 2000 at 07:31:47AM -0800, David Alban wrote:
>
> I use mbox formatted files to store information in addition to
> storing email messages I have received from or send to others. A
> mail program can then be used to manipulate the information in the
> mbox'es.[1] Being able to edi
Michael,
At 2000/11/22/07:59 -0500 Michael P. Soulier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So, if not to resend a message, the point of editing an existing message
> is what? I'm curious as to how people are using this feature.
I use mbox formatted files to store information in addition to
storing
Michael P. Soulier proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> So, if not to resend a message, the point of editing an existing message
> is what? I'm curious as to how people are using this feature.
To add annotations to a mail, for example.
Or to fix broken MIME headers of some kind or the other
On Wed, Nov 22, 2000 at 11:56:54AM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
>
> > feature appears to have been replaced: edit now deletes the original
> > message and replaces it by the new one, but does not offer to resend
> > the new message.
>
> Escape - e (resend message)
So, if not to re
Julian Gilbey proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> [Please cc: me with replies!]
done
> feature appears to have been replaced: edit now deletes the original
> message and replaces it by the new one, but does not offer to resend
> the new message.
Escape - e (resend message)
> Is there any con
[Please cc: me with replies!]
Back in the days of mutt 1.0.1, if one hit 'e' (edit) in the index,
one would be able to edit the message and then have the option to
resend it ("Message has been edited. Are you sure you want to resend?
(y/n)" or something like that). Having just upgraded to 1.2.5