Quoth Paul E Condon on Sunday, 15 January 2012: > I have been messing with the set up of my computer and I've managed > to lose a function that I very much like in mutt: When I click on a > URL in an email I used to have firefox open the web page in a new tab. > Now I get an error message that informs me that > '/home/pec/firefox-9/firefox/firefox' cannot be found. I once did > have firefox-9 installed in my home directory but I have removed it > and no other piece of software is bothered by the change, But mutt > remembers. Where does mutt keep this stale information? What is a good > way to make it look only for iceweasel? > > -- > Paul E Condon > [email protected]
Clicking on a link is probably a function of your terminal of choice. For instance, in urxvt it's a Perl extension (matcher) that uses an X resource (URxvt.urlLauncher) to determine the browser to use. Personally, I set this resource to a shell script in my ~/bin directory, so I can easily switch my preferred browser for all such things. -- .O. | Sterling (Chip) Camden | http://camdensoftware.com ..O | [email protected] | http://chipsquips.com OOO | 2048R/D6DBAF91 | http://chipstips.com
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