I have a question,although this is not too related with mutt. I want to know how do I
strip the
Date:
line from the header of messages coming to me using procmail, and after that procmail
should generate a new Date: based on the date at my computer.
I want to do this, because there are some user
This helps a bit for now... but very unreadable, or a little more
squinting then I would like.
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 11:31:36AM +1100, Robert Martinovic muttered:
| I added the line to my .muttrc which helped with the background issue:
|
| color normal white default
|
| Robert
|
| On Thu,
What would be the .muttrc directive to disable the lame "no subject. abort? ([y]/n)"
prompt?
Jason Helfman proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> This helps a bit for now... but very unreadable, or a little more
> squinting then I would like.
so unset all colors from your .muttrc (or export TERM=vt100, or get a mono
color scheme - plenty of them at dotfiles.org).
-s
--
Suresh Rama
Hi
Please fix your posting address - mail cc'd to [EMAIL PROTECTED] bounces
with this error
-s
- Forwarded message from Unknown User <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -
> Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2001 02:49:02 -0800 (PST)
> From: Unknown User <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Debian, Mutt, Eterm,
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 02:00:02AM -0500, Mark Spivak wrote:
>
> What would be the .muttrc directive to disable the lame "no subject. abort? ([y]/n)"
>prompt?
>
from the manual :
abort_nosubject
Type: quadoption
Default: ask-yes
If set to yes, when composing messages and no subject is give
Mark Spivak proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> What would be the .muttrc directive to disable the lame "no subject. abort?
> ([y]/n)" prompt?
set abort_nosubject=no
-s (who still thinks it's lame not to use a subject line on posts to a list)
--
Suresh Ramasubramanian + Wallopus Malletus Indige
On Mon, Mär 12, 2001 at 02:00:02AM -0500, Mark Spivak wrote:
> What would be the .muttrc directive to disable the lame "no subject. abort? ([y]/n)"
>prompt?
set abort_nosubject=no
beware: subjects are a netiquette topic. there's a reason because this
is the default.
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 04:27:47PM +1100 or thereabouts, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> For other users in my position, namely with a machine without a hostname and/or
> externally visible IP, my advice is to stay clear of sendmail/qmail and try ssmtp.
Funnily enough, I'm doing exactly that:- runnin
Conor Daly proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> Funnily enough, I'm doing exactly that:- running sendmail on a box with an
> internal IP through an IP Masq box and I set it all up using
> Donncha O'Caoimh's "install-sendmail" script available from http://cork.linux.ie
> That's the way to go.
Doing
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 11:37:12AM +, Conor Daly wrote:
> Funnily enough, I'm doing exactly that:- running sendmail on a box with an
> internal IP through an IP Masq box and I set it all up using
> Donncha O'Caoimh's "install-sendmail" script available from http://cork.linux.ie
>
> That's th
Dave Murray proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> That helped me, but it did not address the fact that I had
> no DNS setting for my ISP configured for sendmail.
Put your ISP's DNS servers in /etc/resolv.conf then :)
-s
--
Suresh Ramasubramanian + Wallopus Malletus Indigenensis
mallet @
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 06:35:16PM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
> Dave Murray proclaimed on mutt-users that:
>
> > That helped me, but it did not address the fact that I had
> > no DNS setting for my ISP configured for sendmail.
>
> Put your ISP's DNS servers in /etc/resolv.conf then
On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Jan Johansson wrote:
> In Windows (and a few other) email attachments are dangerous for
> alot or reasons.
>
> The icon shown is in some cases extracted from the .exe file,
> which can lead to that the program is exectued when you open the
> mail.
Cool, I didn't know that o
Hi Dave!
On Sun, 11 Mar 2001, Dave Murray wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 01:25:00PM +1100, Jeff Turner wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Is there any way to configure mutt to send mail through a non-local SMTP
> > server?
> >
> > Yes, I've read the FAQ entry saying "this ain't mutt's job", but.. all mut
Hi Suresh!
On Mon, 12 Mar 2001, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
> > but not on the Internet via my modem. If this sounds like your story, check
> > the setup of your sendmail, specifically DNS. The number is supplied by your
> > ISP in the format of 987.654.32.1 Now I'm a happy camper except for
On Mon, Mar 12, 2001 at 04:30:05PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> [lame-and-lazy-request]
> anyone using maildrop can share a rules file?
In it's most basic setup (I only use header matching rules, that it):
if([EMAIL PROTECTED]/:h)
{
to "./Maildir/mutt-users/"
}
if(/^To: [EMAIL PROT
Some mailing lists etc. are distributed in digest form, i.e.
they have some header/index stuff etc., after which the body
consists of concatenated e-mails maybe with some standard
separator. Can mutt un-digest them, i.e. can I view them
as if separate mails in a folder?
Dirk
Kai Blin proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> Anyway, I don't think a luser would refrain opening a file called
> sexygirl.jpg.vbs if a friend of his sent it and said it was a nice
> picture, would he?
Or the other variants of the hybris worm - F*g with dogs.scr.vbs was one
(one of my collea
[EMAIL PROTECTED] proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> For sendmail I recall it to be sort of the same (smtp:) but don't
> recall the actual configuration file name.
Sendmail has only one config file, not several dozen :) It's a simple matter
of editing sendmail.cf to put
DS your.isps.smtp.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> yep, it's an Z class address (IPv6) allocated for Mars people and mutters.
> :-D
for martians? oh I see ... I thought it was only for residents of the planet
Zeta Centauri in the sugsezxystsryian galaxy.
-s
--
Suresh Ramasubrama
Hi everyone,
I have the following issue using mutt:
it don't display the colors even though
+ I run it on a xterm_color (I can see colored prompt)
+ I have colors settings in my .muttrc
What do I have to do ?
Was there any option to include during the compiling phase?
Thanks in advance,
Oliv
Dirk Laurie proclaimed on mutt-users that:
> Some mailing lists etc. are distributed in digest form, i.e.
> they have some header/index stuff etc., after which the body
> consists of concatenated e-mails maybe with some standard
> separator. Can mutt un-digest them, i.e. can I view them
> as if
Thank you for answering my mail concerning gpg. I used the gpg.rc file
and all was automatically resolved!
cheers
Joss
--
http://www.josswinn.org/PGP_key.html
Hi,
I got several imap folders with 1000+ emails in each. Everytime I open a
folder it takes awfully long until all headers are fetched. How do I
have to configure mutt so that it saves headers or even entire emails
locally and then only kind of syncs these local folders with the imap
folders
I have a (hopefully) quick question to ask.
I am running Mutt v1.3.14i and whenever I receive an email with
an attachment from someone using Microsoft Outlook 2000, the
attachment always comes up looking like:
[-- Attachment #2 --]
[-- Type: application/ms-tnef, Encoding: base64, Size: 32K --]
Unfortunately, the same attachment does not arrive in the same
format. TNEF is the format used by Exchange. "Transfer Neutral
Encapsulation Format." The product I QA for can read these, but there
isn't any publicly available code that I'm aware of to decompose TNEF
files.
I'd
Drew Fisher wrote on mutt-users:
> I have a (hopefully) quick question to ask.
>
> I am running Mutt v1.3.14i and whenever I receive an email with
> an attachment from someone using Microsoft Outlook 2000, the
> attachment always comes up looking like:
>
> Mutt seems to know about attachments
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