Ken Hornstein <[email protected]> writes: > The simplest way is to run the "attach" command at the WhatNow? prompt. > This will choose a MIME type and create an set of MIME parameters that > will be appropriate 95% of the time. > > But all that "attach" really does is add the Attach: header to the > message; other programs take care of the magic. You can also add the > Attach header directly to your message. The arguments to the Attach > header are a single filename. You can have multiple Attach: headers. > So really, think of the "attach" command and the "Attach" header as > doing the same thing, because they do. > > The final way is to create mhbuild directives; see mhbuild(1) for more > detail. This lets you specify the exact MIME structure of a message. > This gives you a great amount of control; the downside is you need to be > relatively knowledgable about MIME if you want to use this functionality > effectively. Your question makes me think you probably don't really > want to use this; I only mention it for the sake of completeness. > > So, in summary: use the "attach" command at WhatNow?, or the Attach: > header if you want to do something a little more intelligent (like > Paul Fox's script).
I'd like to thank everybody who provided an answer to this question. As seldom as I need to send attachments, I was looking for the easiest way to do this. Thanks for the help. Martin McCormick _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers
