Ok, I'll play with the types listed and see if they do what I expect. I
guessed around last night and hit some of those, but wasn't seeing what
I thought I would. I'll let you know. Other answers inline.
On 18 Apr 2014, at 9:41, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 18 Apr 2014, at 4:46, Brett Terpstra wrote:
Are there any input types available besides "canonical"?
Yes, the current input types are:
* none (the default)
No input
* raw
The message in its raw format. This is, for example, suitable for
exporting messages to other email-capable applications.
* decoded
MailMate decodes the body part if it is encoded using
quoted-printable/base64. This is primarily useful if sending specific
body parts to a command. For example, an image would be given to the
command in its raw (original) binary format. This is not currently
used by any of the included commands.
* canonical
Text body parts of the message are decoded, deflowed
(`format=flowed`), and converted to UTF-8 equivalent to what happens
before displaying a non-HTML message.
* html
Currently equivalent to what happens before MailMate displays a
message in its Webview which means that even a plain text message is
converted to HTML. This is probably mainly useful for display
purposes.
* selection
The currently selected text in the message view.
* formatted
Requires an additional `formatString` key/value pair for the command.
This is mainly useful for obtaining specific information from a large
set of messages.
The last one is quite powerful (and fast) if you want to retrieve data
for some kind of statistics. For example, retrieve all sender names of
all selected messages like this:
formatString = "${from.name:No name available}\n";
This is well suited for further handling, e.g., by standard UNIX
commands. For example, a top 10 of senders could be done like this:
sort -f | uniq -ic | sort --reverse --numeric-sort | head -10
If the receiving command can handle it then it's also fine to use the
`formatString` to provide multiple values:
formatString = "${from.name:No name available}\n${subject.body:No
subject available}\n";
When/If event types are expanded then it'll be possible to change how
MailMate displays messages by making, e.g., `canonical` -> `canonical
or `html` -> `html` filters. Filtering before generating a reply is
also going to be possible, e.g., to remove extraneous whitespace,
reflowing, or automatically cut signatures.
I guess that makes part of commands semi-documented. You might want to
ask about `output` types as well ;-)
Consider it asked.
Is there a way to force HTML to the bundle if it exists,
I'd probably need to know your use case to know whether or not
MailMate can do what you want. Using the `decoded` input type, the
main problem is that you need some way to tell MailMate to use the
HTML body part as the input for the command. This it tricky if not
impossible (depending on what you are trying to do).
What I want to do is run my own custom html2text on the output and save
it to a text file (for nvALT import purposes). The output I was getting
from canonical was already "markdownified" in most cases, and it seemed
that with html, there were cases where it would send nothing at all
(assumed it was because there was no html section). If decoded provides
the Content-Type boundaries, I can parse that...
Also, how does MM_SELECTED_RANGE work when the input to the command
isn't the same format as what was selected in the viewer?
In a sense it's never the same format since even a plain text message
is displayed as HTML. To provide `MM_SELECTED_RANGE`, MailMate
heuristically re-locates the selected text in the canonical text when
a command is executed. This currently does not happen for the `html`
input type.
Any chance that when there's a selection and the current view type is
HTML, it could send the raw selected HTML to the output? As in,
MM_SELECTED_TEXT instead of just a range?
-Brett
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