John P. Verel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thanks for your script :) However, I'm getting the following error
> messages:
>
> Executing: openurl
>
>'http://washingtonpost.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic+FTContentServer?pagename=wpni/print&articleid=A64933-2000Mar2'...
> /home/john/bin/openurl: =:
Pete,
You're right! The Gnome terminal is a spendid answer! Part of me
wants a non-mouse based solution, I think this is the answer for me.
On Thu, Mar 02, 2000 at 10:20:51AM -0500, Pete Toscano wrote:
> john,
>
> this could be done by running mutt in the right terminal. i'll bet an
> analog
2000-03-03-22:23:36 Greg Matheson:
> My problem is that Web connections are slow here and I want to put
> urlview in the background and go back to the mutt I have running
> (rather than opening another and having to keep track of all my
> instances of mutt).
>
> But I don't think this is possible,
Michael,
Thanks for your script :) Am I correct to assume that I save it under
some name somewhere in my path and call it from the ~/.urlview COMMAND
line?
Thanks.
John
On Fri, Mar 03, 2000 at 01:55:00PM -0500, Michael Sanders wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 02, 2000 at 08:54:33PM -0500, John P. Verel
David,
Thanks for your script :) However, I'm getting the following error
messages:
Executing: openurl
'http://washingtonpost.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic+FTContentServer?pagename=wpni/print&articleid=A64933-2000Mar2'...
/home/john/bin/openurl: =: command not found
/home/john/bin/openurl: die: c
On Thu, Mar 02, 2000 at 07:28:19PM +0100, Jens Bech Madsen wrote:
> Unfortunately a lot of websites are based on databases and
> often have really illegible URLs. I often have the problem that
> urlview gives me a long list of nearly identical URLs without
> providing context.
I don't have that
John P. Verel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Question: How to get to launch Netscape if not open and/or same
> question for lynx?
Here's my entry:
~/.urlview:
REGEXP ((https?|ftp)://|www\.)[-a-z_0-9@#$%&+=:;'~,./?]+[a-z_0-9/]
COMMAND openurl
~/bin/openurl:
#!/usr/bin/perl
On Thu, Mar 02, 2000 at 08:54:33PM -0500, John P. Verel wrote:
>
> 3-The Red Hat sample.urlview has the following command:
> to invoke for selected URL
> COMMAND netscape -remote 'openURL(%s)'
> I get an error message if Netscape is not open; works only with
> Netscape running.
>
> Question: Ho
Fairlight <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I agree with you on this. This said from a person still running 0.95.7i.
> :) I saw all the bug reports at 1.x and decided I was better off where I
> was. I haven't been having any problems with mine.
The bug reports are for 1.1.x. You probably wouldn't have a
On Thu, Mar 02, 2000 at 07:28:19PM +0100, Jens Bech Madsen thus spoke:
> Unfortunately a lot of websites are based on databases and often have
> really illegible URLs. I often have the problem that urlview gives me a
> long list of nearly identical URLs without providing context.
>
> What I would
Thanks to all for the replies :) I got urlview working, discovering
three things:
1-There was no .urlview in either /etc or my home directory.
Apparently Red Hat 6.1 didn't do this?
2-My .muttrc, the default which came with the package, had the \cb
binding set for the index but not the pager.
On Thu, 02 Mar 2000, Telsa Gwynne wrote:
>
> In fact, the way I first met Mutt (as a package on a Red Hat Linux
> system that was automatically installed), it was all set up already.
> The /etc/Muttrc file (the global one that is everyone's default)
> had the macro for ^B in it, urlview was alre
john,
this could be done by running mutt in the right terminal. i'll bet an
analogue exists in kde, but in gnome, just run mutt in a gnome-terminal.
you'll notice that when you move the mouse over a url, such as in
kevin's sig below, the pointer will turn to a pointing hand and the url
will be u
On Thu, Mar 02, 2000 at 07:24:59AM +0200 or thereabouts, Mikko Hänninen wrote:
> John P. Verel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Wed, 01 Mar 2000:
> > Now, next project is to be able to
> > "click" on imbeded hyperlinks. The mutt manual (4.12) refers to an
> > external urlview program. I'm unclear wh
On 2000-03-01 18:58:08 -0800, -kevin- wrote:
> Change to:
> text/html; netscape -remote 'openFile(%s)';copiousoutput
Bad idea. You'd rather want this:
text/html; netscape -remote 'openFile('%s')'; copiousoutput
Note that the %s itself MUST NOT be enclosed by any form of quoting,
beca
John P. Verel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Wed, 01 Mar 2000:
> Now, next project is to be able to
> "click" on imbeded hyperlinks. The mutt manual (4.12) refers to an
> external urlview program. I'm unclear what the manual means in
> referring to macro indexetc. Have you done this?
The ur
Kevin,
Thanks. Worked like a charm! Now, next project is to be able to
"click" on imbeded hyperlinks. The mutt manual (4.12) refers to an
external urlview program. I'm unclear what the manual means in
referring to macro indexetc. Have you done this?
On Wed, Mar 01, 2000 at 06:58:08PM -
John,
On 00-03-01 20:46, John P. Verel wrote:
> My mailcap entry looks like this:
>
> text/html; netscape -remote openURL\(%s\)
Change to:
text/html; netscape -remote 'openFile(%s)';copiousoutput
--
-* -kevin-*-
-* sick with the good infection *-
-* [EMAIL PROTECT
Hi. I've got mutt loaded with the default mime types and mailcap file
that came with the distro and am running under RH 6.1 When I attempt
to view attached HTML, I get the following message:
sh: syntax error near unexpected token `openURL(''
sh: -c: line 1: `netscape -remote openURL('/tmp/AP-A
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