Ralph Corderoy <[email protected]> writes:
>> You know, just out loud ... it wouldn't surprise me if it only happens
>> with lines that start with "#"; I bet even though directives are
>> turned off, it's seeing a backslash as the directive line continuation
>> character.
> Indeedy. But presumably Tom is running with -nodirectives or uses an
> `#off' in his draft?
No, and no. I never even heard of -nodirectives, and don't see any such
thing in the "send" man page. As for #off, why should I be expecting to
have to put directives into a plain text message?
The workflow I'm accustomed to is that, if I've put any directives into
my message, I run mhbuild on them explicitly (using C-c C-e in emacs
MH-Letter mode). If I haven't done that, I would really rather that
lines that happen to start with '#' not be considered magic.
Looking at the send man page, it claims to invoke mhbuild with -auto,
which mhbuild's man page suggests implies -nodirectives, but that
evidently isn't the behavior I'm getting.
In a different line of thinking: if mhbuild did take #define as a
directive, why didn't it barf on an unrecognized directive?
regards, tom lane
_______________________________________________
Nmh-workers mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers