Today I applied updates for my Debian box, running Sid, or unstable. So
Ncurses was updated, and when running mutt in an Eterm, before I could
get a transparent Eterm with mutt. But now mutt runs a standard looking
black/white term. I guess this is because of the upgrade, so I
recompiled mutt. Sam
Is there a simple way to change the subject line of an incoming
message before saving it?
It would be particularly useful to do this when saving the messages
one gets when subscribing to mailing lists. I keep these in a single
mailbox and because of the inconsistency of the subject lines used
it
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:37:25AM +, Chris Green wrote:
:
: Is there a simple way to change the subject line of an incoming
: message before saving it?
:
: It would be particularly useful to do this when saving the messages
: one gets when subscribing to mailing lists. I keep these in a si
On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 01:17:56PM -0600, Bill Andersen wrote:
> Sorry for such a basic question, but I don't want to get too
> involved in figuring out Mutt, if the answer to this quesstion
> is NO... If it is YES, I'll get some FAQs/Docs and do some
> reading before I ask any more questions...
I am using Debian Sid, with sendmail. I would like setup mutt so that the
return address on my out going mail is my work email address and not the
address on the machine. I tried looking around for how to do this and
failed miserably. So any help would be invaluable...
Thanks a Bunch
-Geg-
Horace G. Friend III wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I already have the macros and when I execute them in X-Windows it
> automatically opens my Netscape viewer. Fine. Neat.
>
> But when I'm in Term and out of X-Windows, nothing happens. What
> should I do so that it opens Lynx, for instance.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
John Averitt proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> I am using Debian Sid, with sendmail. I would like setup mutt so that the
> return address on my out going mail is my work email address and not the
> address on the machine. I tried looking around for how to do this and
> failed miserably. So any
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 01:51:20AM -0800, Eugene Lee wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:37:25AM +, Chris Green wrote:
> :
> : Is there a simple way to change the subject line of an incoming
> : message before saving it?
> :
> : It would be particularly useful to do this when saving the mess
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Jason Helfman wrote:
> Today I applied updates for my Debian box, running Sid, or unstable. So
> Ncurses was updated, and when running mutt in an Eterm, before I could
> get a transparent Eterm with mutt. But now mutt runs a standard looking
> black/white term. I guess this is
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:50:17PM +1100, David wrote:
> Chris Green wrote:
> > The problem is that the subject lines from the various different
> > mailing list servers aren't consistent and many don't even have the
> > name of the mailing list in them. Thus it isn't always easy looking
> > at t
Chris Green wrote:
> The problem is that the subject lines from the various different
> mailing list servers aren't consistent and many don't even have the
> name of the mailing list in them. Thus it isn't always easy looking
> at the index of my 'subscriptions' mailbox to see which message is
>
Maybe I'm a moron, but isn't what you want just to hit "e" when in the
index, and then edit your message in the editor?
Jesper
--
"But how can one be warm alone?"
Jesper Holmberg [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:15:10AM +, Chris Green wrote:
: On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:50:17PM +1100, David wrote:
: > Chris Green wrote:
: > > The problem is that the subject lines from the various different
: > > mailing list servers aren't consistent and many don't even have the
: > > name
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 01:02:09PM +0100, Jesper Holmberg wrote:
> Maybe I'm a moron, but isn't what you want just to hit "e" when in the
> index, and then edit your message in the editor?
>
No, you're not a moron, that's pretty much what I need - thanks!
--
Chris Green ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Ho
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 04:04:19AM -0800, Eugene Lee wrote:
>
> : I definitely don't want the name of the mailing list in the subject
> : of normal messages from the mailing list as I already know which list
> : they're from because they have been routed to a specific mailbox by
> : procmail.
>
On Mon, 05 Mar 2001, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
Dave Murray proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> > I was able to set up the pop3 for my ISP's mail server and receive mail with
> > mutt just fine. Now how do I set up sendmail for smtp to my ISP mail server?
>
> http://www.hserus.net/dlhowto.html
I recently discovered a little script called install-sendmail, which helped me set up
sendmail for use with mutt in a few minutes.
you can download it from :
http://members.nbci.com/xeer/index.html
HTH
Barry
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 06:54:27AM -0700, Dave Murray wrote:
> On Mon, 05 Mar 2001,
I do my News with the nntp-patched mutt and the NNTP perl script by
Waldemar Brodkorb, and have two questions.
First, I want to use scoring. Is it possible to define an index-format
command that applies on Newsgroups only? (Should be a regexp.) I dislike
to see scores in my mail index...
Second
Barry Mitchelson proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> I recently discovered a little script called install-sendmail, which helped
> me set up sendmail for use with mutt in a few minutes.
That's Donncha O'Caoimh's script which can be found at http://cork.linux.ie
> you can download it from :
> htt
Hi-
I'm having problems sending attachments to non mutt users. It appears
to be stemming from their not being able to recognize the boundaries
between attachments (I've noticed that other mailers use a "boundary"
variable, and my mutt is adding an asterisk to this.)
I'd really appreciate any h
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 12:11:04PM +, Chris Green wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 01:02:09PM +0100, Jesper Holmberg wrote:
> > Maybe I'm a moron, but isn't what you want just to hit "e" when in the
> > index, and then edit your message in the editor?
> >
> No, you're not a moron, that's pret
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 08:09:16AM -0700, W M Brelsford wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 12:11:04PM +, Chris Green wrote:
> > On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 01:02:09PM +0100, Jesper Holmberg wrote:
> > > Maybe I'm a moron, but isn't what you want just to hit "e" when in the
> > > index, and then edit
Well the term is xterm.
I have tried to export vt100 and linux, but I am getting the same issue.
When I compose a message, though, the window is transparent. I am
confused.
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 05:56:24AM -0500, Thomas E. Dickey muttered:
| On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Jason Helfman wrote:
|
| > Toda
Hi-
I'm having problems sending attachments to non mutt users. It appears
to be stemming from their not being able to recognize the boundaries
between attachments (I've noticed that other mailers use a "boundary"
variable, and my mutt is adding an asterisk to this.)
I'd really appreciate any
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Jason Helfman wrote:
> Well the term is xterm.
Eterm has its own terminfo, which differs from "xterm". (The 'bce' and
'op' strings in particular are what the screen library looks at in the
terminfo to decide if it can use "default" colors).
>
> I have tried to export vt100
Hi,
I'm having trouble figuring out how to change the behavior of mutt's
save_name feature.
What I'm trying to do is to get mutt to do the save_name thing, except
instead of having it save in =username, I want it to save in
=work/username if any recipient's address contains "concordia.ca", and
i
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:02:03AM -0500, Rich Lafferty wrote:
> I tried playing with changing the value of "folder" with a send-hook,
> but since it doesn't reset immediately after, it mungs up normal
> operations (since I still want "folder" to just be "~/mail/").
>
> Is there a straightforwar
On Thu 08-Mar-2001 at 04:23:35PM +0100, Mullen A.J. wrote:
> I'm having problems sending attachments to non mutt users. It appears
> to be stemming from their not being able to recognize the boundaries
> between attachments (I've noticed that other mailers use a "boundary"
> variable, and my mut
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 08:14:49AM -0800, Gary Johnson ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:02:03AM -0500, Rich Lafferty wrote:
>
> > I tried playing with changing the value of "folder" with a send-hook,
> > but since it doesn't reset immediately after, it mungs up normal
> >
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:29:23AM -0500, Rich Lafferty wrote:
> folder-hook . 'set folder=~/mail'
> send-hook concordia.ca 'set folder=~/mail/conu'
> send-hook !concordia.ca 'set folder=~/mail/personal'
how about:
send-hook . 'set folder=~/mail/personal'
send-hook concordi
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:47:00AM -0500, Peter Kovacs ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:29:23AM -0500, Rich Lafferty wrote:
> > folder-hook . 'set folder=~/mail'
> > send-hook concordia.ca 'set folder=~/mail/conu'
> > send-hook !concordia.ca 'set folder=~/mail/personal
How about using Procmail rules to put your mail where you like?
* Rich Lafferty ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [010308 08:56]:
=>On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:47:00AM -0500, Peter Kovacs ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
=>> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:29:23AM -0500, Rich Lafferty wrote:
=>> > folder-hook . 'set fol
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:29:23AM -0500, Rich Lafferty wrote:
> Well, with that I end up with
>
> send-hook . 'set folder=~/Mail'
> send-hook concordia.ca 'set folder=~/Mail/conu'
> send-hook !concordia.ca 'set folder=~/Mail/personal'
>
> and, as you can see, that first condition never
So where would I go from this point? I have no issues with
investigating, but if you could point me in the right direction, that
could be cool.
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 10:51:56AM -0500, Thomas E. Dickey muttered:
| On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Jason Helfman wrote:
|
| > Well the term is xterm.
|
| Eterm
On Thu 08-Mar-2001 at 05:42:11PM +0100, Mullen A.J. wrote:
> Here's an example of the full header and boundaries I'm sending
> which is not being properly decoded by other mailers (although it
> is by other mutt users).
> From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thu Mar 8 15:20:13 2001
> Date: Thu, 8 Mar 2001 15
To elaborate on my earlier question about including attachments,
the following is what I'm sending out. This is the raw text of the
mail. When Mutt receives this, it's able to parse it without a problem
and treat the attachments and text appropriately. When other mailers
(so far tried with emac
Mullen A.J. writes:
> To elaborate on my earlier question about including attachments,
> the following is what I'm sending out. This is the raw text of the
> mail. When Mutt receives this, it's able to parse it without a problem
> and treat the attachments and text appropriately. When other mai
On 03/08/01, 09:42:49AM +1100, Robert Martinovic wrote:
> Hello,
> I know that there are mutt users using emacs as their editor. I
> would like to know how to set line length at 72 chars in my
> .emacs
> It infuriates many to have messages longer that 72 chars to a
> line
One can use po
i have been trying to build mutt 1.3.16 on my machine (RH 7.0) and
when i run ./configure i get the following error message:
sed: can't read ./doc/instdoc.sh.in: no such file or directory
can anyone help.
marcelo martinelli.
Marcelo Martinelli writes:
> i have been trying to build mutt 1.3.16 on my machine (RH 7.0) and
> when i run ./configure i get the following error message:
>
> sed: can't read ./doc/instdoc.sh.in: no such file or directory
>
> can anyone help.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mutt-dev/message/102
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 08:14:39PM +, Lars Hecking wrote:
> Marcelo Martinelli writes:
> > i have been trying to build mutt 1.3.16 on my machine (RH 7.0) and
> > when i run ./configure i get the following error message:
> >
> > sed: can't read ./doc/instdoc.sh.in: no such file or directory
>
Jason Helfman [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> Well the term is xterm.
Try xterm-color.
> When I compose a message, though, the window is transparent. I am
> confused.
Mutt tends to be fairly picky about what capabilities it believes the
terminal has, your editor is apparently not so picky.
--
Je
Christian R Molls muttered:
> is it possible to make the key advance to the next-new message
> in the current thread, if any, and return to the index if the last new
> message in the current thread has been reached?
AFAICS no. Mutt isn't capabale of conditioned executions ie. there's not
"if" co
On 03/08, Michael Tatge rearranged the electrons to read:
> Christian R Molls muttered:
> > is it possible to make the key advance to the next-new message
> > in the current thread, if any, and return to the index if the last new
> > message in the current thread has been reached?
>
> AFAICS no.
I installed abook-0.4.11 last night for use with mutt-1.2.5. I
installed ncurses-5.2 first before compiling abook. In my .muttrc
file, I placed the following line:
set query_command="abook --mutt-query '%s'"
When I type "Q", I get the line query line and I type in a string.
I then hit return a
Hi All,
Can anyone explain how mutt_dotlock works and where its
settings are kept.
Mutt tries to write to my outbox and tries to dotlock a file
named "outbox." in the same directory. It cant (for some
reason I cant quite see).
But can I change the place it tries to write the lock file
to inste
Thanks for the help. After lot's of stuff. Fixed DNS, ran install-sendmail
script, ... I've got it to where when I send this, it won't actualy go.
If I go to a superuser terminal and type:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/sendmail status
I get:
sendmail dead but subsys locked
If I type:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/sen
Dave Murray proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> Thanks for the help. After lot's of stuff. Fixed DNS, ran install-sendmail
> script, ... I've got it to where when I send this, it won't actualy go.
> Repeat, gets same result, then repeat again gives [ OK ][ OK ]
> Then the mail gets sent!
> I'
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