On Sun, Apr 28, 2002 at 08:19:19PM -0700, John Iverson wrote:
> Actually, it was me who was missing something. I'm using "color
> index" to match my old addresses, not "color header". So I'm
> coloring the matched messages in the index, rather than coloring
> the headers in the pager. Sorry ab
[29.04.02 01:45:36% +] Flavien <-- :
> What I'm trying to match are headers like :
>
> Subject: Blah blah
> To: "My Friend" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Another" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Flavien" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> "Joe Foobar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "x" <[EMAIL PROTECTED
* On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, Flavien wrote:
> I must be missing something. It does not work here... :-(
Actually, it was me who was missing something. I'm using "color
index" to match my old addresses, not "color header". So I'm
coloring the matched messages in the index, rather than coloring
the he
Hi,
John Iverson gave the following hint :
> I use ~C for this and it seems to work fine, even when the
> address isn't on the first line of the To: header. Try this:
>
> color header red black "~C myoldlogin\@myoldaddress\.com"
I must be missing something. It does not work here... :-(
I
* On Sun, 28 Apr 2002, Flavien wrote:
> I have som old addresses that some people still have in their
> address-books. I'd like to spot these people by colorizing the headers
> when matching one of those addresses. It works pretty well with :
>
> color header red black 'To:.*myold
Hi,
* Flavien [04/28/02 17:36:10 CEST] wrote:
> I have som old addresses that some people still have in their
> address-books. I'd like to spot these people by colorizing the headers
> when matching one of those addresses. It works pretty well with :
> color header red black 'To:.
* Flavien <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-04-28 17.36 +0200]:
> Hello,
Hi.
> I have som old addresses that some people still have in their
> address-books. I'd like to spot these people by colorizing the headers
> when matching one of those addresses. It works pretty well with :
[...snip