El día Wednesday, July 29, 2015 a las 03:52:01PM -0400, Fred Smith escribió:
> On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 02:38:30PM -0500, David Champion wrote:
> > Simplest idea I have is to add a procmail (or whatever) rule to detect
> > top-posting,
> > then insert a yes or no header into the message:
> >
> >
* Ian Zimmerman [07-30-15 01:55]:
> On 2015-07-30 07:33 +0200, Suvayu Ali wrote:
>
> > It's mutt after all, why not ssh into your preferred system and run mutt?
>
> Err ... that's actually what I do, in the other direction.
>
> Because the mail is on the server.
>
> The question is, is there a
On Thu, Jul 30, 2015 at 07:36:04AM +1000, Brian Salter-Duke wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 09:32:29AM +1000, Brian Salter-Duke wrote:
> >
> > Le 22/07/2015 à 20:31, Brian Salter-Duke a écrit :
> > > It does have a lot od email addresses in it. If you email me, I will send
> > > you a
> > > copy
Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> Is there any hook or crook by which I could read encrypted mail with
> mutt without my private key being installed on the host where mutt runs?
> Some agent forwarding magic, pretty please? I really, really don't want
> to put my key on my mail server. And no, please don't
On 2015-07-30 06:50 -0700, Kevin J. McCarthy wrote:
> I haven't done anything more than search, but there is a thread about
> this here:
> http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/gnupg/users/68713
>
> Looks like they are referring to a new OpenSSH 6.7 feature combined
> with a new GPG 2.1 feature
Hi Mattias -
* On 30 Jul 2015, Matthias Apitz wrote:
>
> are some other text lines. Of course we need here a good regular
> expression because the line 'On 29 Jul 2015, Matthias Apitz wrote:'
> is highly configurable and language dependent.
That's why I wouldn't do it with anything regular-expr
Le 30/07/2015 à 07:36, Brian Salter-Duke a écrit :
> I will try to attach it. Thanks for all your help.
It worked fine for me. If didn't for you it means you missed something.
Here is my setup:
In ~/.muttrc:
auto_view text/calendar
In ~/.mailcap:
text/calendar; ~/.mutt/vcalendar-filter; copiousou
On 30.07.2015, Matthias Apitz wrote:
> A top posting we see, when in the body of the mail before a line like
> this:
>
> On 29 Jul 2015, Matthias Apitz wrote:
>
> are some other text lines. Of course we need here a good regular
> expression because the line 'On 29 Jul 2015, Matthias Apitz wrote
On Thu Jul 30 22:24:03 2015, Heinz Diehl wrote:
> That said, I doubt such a script which *reliably* detects top-postings
> can be done. As a starting point for your language problem: simply
> check if the first line in the mail body ends with a colon (":").
It’s not so simple. The first line of th
Am Do, 30. Jul 2015 um 22:24:03 +0200 schrieb Heinz Diehl:
> First: you can't do that using procmail alone. A perl, python, ruby or
> whatever script will be needed. Simply pipe all incoming mail to your
> script via procmail.
May I suggest t-prot[1] which works great as a display filter in mutt?
On Thu, Jul 30, 2015 at 10:14:39PM +0200, Bernard Massot wrote:
> Le 30/07/2015 à 07:36, Brian Salter-Duke a écrit :
> > I will try to attach it. Thanks for all your help.
> It worked fine for me. If didn't for you it means you missed something.
> Here is my setup:
>
> In ~/.muttrc:
> auto_view te
Dear Michael, dear Cameron,
* Michael Tatge [2015-07-22 14:17]:
> * On Wed, Jul 22, 2015 11:35AM -0400 Peter P. (peterpar...@fastmail.com)
> muttered:
> > I have bound the 'd' key to move mails to a trash folder, and 'D' to
> > move an entire thread to a trash folder:
> >
> > folder-hook . 'ma
* spaceman [2015-07-29 13:57]:
> >is there a way to tell mutt to show me more of the sender name in index
> >view? Currently it seems to be 15 characters regardless of the
> >(x)terminal dimensions.
>
> The following should set the field width to twenty: Original
> index_format = "%4C %Z %{%b %d}
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