>Because the sooner we create the prefix, the sooner future new headers >can fall under it. Ken says we discussed this over `Attach'. Here we >are for `Forward'. Next year it will be another one?
My recollection is that it actually came up originally for Envelope-From, actually. So, here's the official list of headers that nmh uses for what would be classified as "internal use", that is to say, send(1)/post(8) uses them to change their behavior, but they do not actually get sent out on the wire. Bcc: Dcc: Fcc: Envelope-From: Attach: (there is also Resent-Bcc, Resent-Dcc, and Resent-Fcc). I'm not counting the things like Resent/Forwarded/Replied, as while send(1) does create those headers, it's not really using them to change anything that it does. I'll take the blame for the last two, but the previous ones have been around forever. My feelings are that there is plenty of prior art for having special headers that tell send/post what to do, I don't see the value of having a special Nmh- prefix. But like I said before, I recognize that not everyone feels the same way. If they happen to leak out in the wild, they won't harm anything since they're not official headers. --Ken _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers
