-kevin- <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> It also seems to preserve the date of the original email, instead of
> giving it a new date. Yes, 'Date:' is correct but the 'From' line
> without a colon contains the date of the original email, which happens
> to be what tagging by date looks at.
Not quit
-kevin- <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Thu, 01 Jun 2000:
> In short, my preference would be that if you send a message,
> regarless of its origin, it should be treated as a new message, as
> though composed in the usual manner.
I don't know about the date stuff, but here's an untested patch for
mak
On 00-05-26 10:41, -kevin- <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The Short:
> I notice that when I 'resend-message' (e) that it doesn't get
> copied to my 'sent' folder.
Additional Note:
It also seems to preserve the date of the original email, instead
of giving it a new date. Yes, 'Date:' is correct but
On Fri, May 26, 2000 at 09:32:20PM +0300, Mikko Hänninen wrote:
> But yes, there should be an option as to whether resend-message
> will default to Fcc'ing or not -- or if there's no option, the
> default should be yes.
ACK. This bite me several days ago :-(((
Best regards,
Daniel
PGP signatu
-kevin- <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Fri, 26 May 2000:
> I notice that when I 'resend-message' (e) that it doesn't get
> copied to my 'sent' folder.
I think that this is only because resend-message doesn't fill the Fcc
header by default. If you add a folder in there, it'll work...
But yes, ther
The Short:
I notice that when I 'resend-message' (e) that it doesn't get
copied to my 'sent' folder.
The Long:
I'm a bad typist. Sometimes I mistype an address and send the
mail off. I get the bounce message.
Crack open mutt (v1.2) on my 'sent' folder where copies of all my
emails go. I find