Hello. Your moderate flag was still on.
Χάρης Καραχριστιανίδης wrote in <20230216081131.myqru%[email protected]>: |Steffen Nurpmeso <[email protected]> wrote: |> Χάρης Καραχριστιανίδης wrote in ... |> Oh it is _such_ a pity i cannot speek Greek! |Aber ich spreche Deutch! :-) Deutschland ist auch sehr schoen! Na ja. Not where i life, and not in winter. Too grey, too dark, too cold. Autobahn ist schön, for some strange notion of schön, but i do not use it. |> With "open" you mean the "type" or "print" command? |I just write the email number and press enter. I suppose it is open? This eventually ends up as the `next' command on the given message list, so i tend to agree. |With | ? set pipe-text/html='?* lynx -stdin -dump -force_html' | ? type HTML-MESSAGE | |I get this error: "s-nail: type: needs an active mailbox" Well, you should have opened one first :-) |Hereis my .mailrc : | | set v15-compat Make it set v15-compat=y. Like this you do not need "wysh", and the rest is upwards compatible. | set emptystart | set sendcharsets=utf-8,iso-8859-1 | set reply-in-same-charset | set sendwait Is default. | set mimetypes-load-control Without value is like not set. I'll change this for v14.10, when the variable was introduced we could not yet forbit empty variables. Credits. |wysh set pipe-application/pdf='?&=? trap "rm -f \"${MAILX_FILENAME_\ |TEMPORARY}\"" EXIT; trap "trap \"\" INT QUIT TERM; exit 1" INT \ |QUIT TERM; mupdf "${MAILX_FILENAME_TEMPORARY}"' (No "wysh", then. But like i said, you possibly want to create a ~/.mailcap that can be shared with other programs. For example #@ ~/.mailcap application/pdf;\ /Applications/Preview.app/Contents/MacOS/Preview %s;\ test = [ "$(uname -s|tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]')" = darwin ] 2>/dev/null;\ nametemplate=%s.pdf; x-mailx-test-once application/pdf;\ infile=%s\;\ trap "rm -f ${infile}" EXIT\;\ trap "exit 75" INT QUIT TERM\;\ mupdf "${infile}";\ test = [ -n "${DISPLAY}" ] >/dev/null 2>&1;\ nametemplate = %s.pdf; x-mailx-async; x-mailx-test-once application/pdf;\ pdfinfo %s\; pdftotext -layout %s -;\ test = command -v pdfinfo >/dev/null 2>&1; \ copiousoutput; nametemplate=%s.pdf; x-mailx-test-once application/*;\ echo 'This is "%t", it looks like:'\; < %s head -c 512 | cat -vet\; echo;\ copiousoutput; x-mailx-noquote; x-mailx-last-resort image/*;\ display %s;\ test = { [ -n "${DISPLAY}" ] && command -v display\; } >/dev/null 2>&1;\ x-mailx-test-once |set pipe-text/html='?* lynx -stdin -dump -force_html' |type HTML-MESSAGE | |account account1 { | localopts yes Not needed in an account. | set ssl_force_tls This is nada -> set smtp-use-starttls (Will be implied default in v14.10.) | set mta=smtp://user:[email protected]:993 | set from="Me [email protected]" This surely does not work. It must be either "Me <[email protected]>" or plain [email protected]. It seems you also want set fullnames. | set folder=.mail/account1 | set record=imaps://user:[email protected]:993/Sent | set inbox=imaps://user:[email protected]:993 I would suggest simply setting user and password, and drop that user:pass thing everywhere. For example set user=user password=pass | set imap-keepalive=240 | set imap-cache=~/.mail/.imap_cache | shortcut imap imaps://user:[email protected]:993 | # Type oi to login to the IMAP account | commandalias oi 'fi imap' |} | |and account2 follows |I open account1 with a .bashrc entry: |alias o="export MAIL=$HOME/.mail/account1/ && mailx -A account1" ..ok.. you could simply do this in the account ? set verbose; varshow MAIL; unset verbose #sync-environ set MAIL=/var/mail/steffen ? set MAIL=/dubi.du ? var MAIL set MAIL=/dubi.du ? ! echo $MAIL /dubi.du As this is exported automatically .. to at least children of s-nail, not to its parent shell. |Everything works normally I think and without the 2 added lines ( |set pipe-text/html='?* lynx -stdin -dump -force_html' |type HTML-MESSAGE |) |I don't have this error about active mailbox. |Thanks a lot for reply! Ciao. --steffen | |Der Kragenbaer, The moon bear, |der holt sich munter he cheerfully and one by one |einen nach dem anderen runter wa.ks himself off |(By Robert Gernhardt)
