I'm glad to read good tricks about mutt. The document (manual.txt) is
too short of examples that we have to pull out handfuls of hairs to get a
function work. :)
charlie
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On Thu, Dec 27, 2001 at 02:39:48AM -0700, Rob 'Feztaa' Park wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 27, 2001 at 01:36:51PM +0800, Charles Jie
On Thu, Dec 27, 2001 at 07:00:02AM -0500, David T-G (dis)graced my inbox with:
> % My ~/Maildir/ folder has 1 messages, and my =sent folder has 6000
> % messages, so it's slow to switch between them if they get closed each time
> % I switch.
>
> I'm not going to suggest that you rotate your m
Philip --
...and then Philip Mak said...
%
% Is there a way to make it so that when I use the "c" command to change to
% a different folder, the original one remains open?
Nope; mutt works on a single folder at a time. You could, however, open
up a second instance of mutt (even one pointing to
On Thu, Dec 27, 2001 at 01:36:51PM +0800, Charles Jie (dis)graced my inbox with:
> You should not keep that many messages in a working 'folder' (indeed
> file). You'd better initialize a new one for high traffic folder
> yearly, quarterly or even monthly.
I agree, I automatically move all my old
You should not keep that many messages in a working 'folder' (indeed file). You'd
better initialize a new one for high traffic folder yearly, quarterly or even monthly.
For sent folder, I'll rename the file to sent.2001 soon in the end of
this year.
best regards,
charlie
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On Thu, Dec 27, 200
Is there a way to make it so that when I use the "c" command to change to
a different folder, the original one remains open?
My ~/Maildir/ folder has 1 messages, and my =sent folder has 6000
messages, so it's slow to switch between them if they get closed each time
I switch.
BTW, I just noti