On 18 Oct 2017, at 19:03, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- the attachment (i.e. the invite);
This is where you need me to add something to MailMate. I've kind of
postponed providing attachments to bundle commands until it was
needed, but this
On 20 Oct 2017, at 0:09, Bill Cole wrote:
[...]
Unfortunately, the vast wiggle room in the above description means
that there is literally no way to create a message which includes an
iCalendar object of any sort which will be presented consistently by
all iCalendar-aware or all
On 19 Oct 2017, at 17:31, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- the status
What kind of status?
You don't do many meetings, do you? :) It's accepted, rejected, maybe
I should perhaps start arranging meetings with myself in order to better
understand the world outside :)
- optionally a remark.
On 19 Oct 2017, at 13:28 (-0400), Max Rydahl Andersen wrote:
I just realised I could really use this feature (having remark) as
busycal don't support putting remarks on invites.
It is common practice for the iCalendar "DESCRIPTION" attribute to be
either presented as inline "body" text of an
Hi Benny,
Thanks for detailed answers. I've added some comments below.
On 18 Oct 2017, at 19:03, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
Hi Giovanni,
you already got some replies. I'll try to fill the gaps.
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- the status
What kind of status?
You
On 18 Oct 2017, at 13:50, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
But I'm curious about the multimime (ical + html) message that needs
go back with the body of the calendar invite base64 encoded.
The `base64` encoding happens automatically for attachments. If I
remember correctly Outlook some times
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:46, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
So as far as I can see, I'm left with this
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- And how does mailmate parse the reply? For example the invite needs
to be encoded in base64.
From your blog post I see that in 2014 only discard
Hi Giovanni,
you already got some replies. I'll try to fill the gaps.
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- the email account this was sent to/the account that received it;
That's probably best done using `#source.server`. You can use the GUI
(e.g., the statistics view) to
On 18 Oct 2017, at 0:11, Max Rydahl Andersen wrote:
- And how does mailmate parse the reply? For example the invite
needs to be encoded in base64.
From your blog post I see that in 2014 only discard or action were
supported. Is that still the case Benny?
Because otherwise there's not much
/max
http://about.me/maxandersen
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:46, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
So as far as I can see, I'm left with this
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- And how does mailmate parse the reply? For example the invite needs
to be encoded in base64.
From your blog
So as far as I can see, I'm left with this
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
- And how does mailmate parse the reply? For example the invite needs
to be encoded in base64.
From your blog post I see that in 2014 only discard or action were
supported. Is that still the case
/max
http://about.me/maxandersen
On 17 Oct 2017, at 23:18, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
On 17 Oct 2017, at 22:34, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 14 Oct 2017, at 1:26, Jonas Kemper wrote:
Has anybody dealt with this before? My ideal scenario would be
control elements to respond with
On 17 Oct 2017, at 22:34, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 14 Oct 2017, at 1:26, Jonas Kemper wrote:
Has anybody dealt with this before? My ideal scenario would be
control elements to respond with "yes/no/maybe" in Mailmate whenever
a meeting invite comes in.
It seems you got a couple of
On 14 Oct 2017, at 1:26, Jonas Kemper wrote:
Has anybody dealt with this before? My ideal scenario would be control
elements to respond with "yes/no/maybe" in Mailmate whenever a meeting
invite comes in.
It seems you got a couple of somewhat promising replies. I cannot offer
to look into
On 2017-10-14 01:26:55 (+0200), Jonas Kemper wrote:
I'm trying to wrap my head around how RSVPing to calendar invites
works. I appreciate how easy this is for example in gmail/outlook.
Now, my situation might be a little bit specific. I have no offline
calendar configured whatsoever. This
Outlook is really a combo program not pure mail client.
On 16 Oct 2017, at 12:45, Giovanni Lanzani wrote:
On 16 Oct 2017, at 12:01, Robert Brenstein wrote:
Does any other mail client provide such a functionality? I thought it
was the calendar programs that did it. I wonder, though, whether
Jonas,
Thanks for your question. I had been meaning to research this for a
while and hadn’t gotten around to it until now.
Like most things related to iCalendar and CalDAV, it’s super hard to
find information on event replies. The short story is that replies are
done by sending an iCalendar
On 16 Oct 2017, at 12:01, Robert Brenstein wrote:
Does any other mail client provide such a functionality? I thought it
was the calendar programs that did it. I wonder, though, whether you
can fake it through a bundle.
Outlook? :)
___
mailmate
Does any other mail client provide such a functionality? I thought it
was the calendar programs that did it. I wonder, though, whether you can
fake it through a bundle.
Robert
On 14 Oct 2017, at 1:26, Jonas Kemper wrote:
Hi everybody!
I'm trying to wrap my head around how RSVPing to
On 14 Oct 2017, at 1:26, Jonas Kemper wrote:
Hi everybody!
I'm trying to wrap my head around how RSVPing to calendar invites
works. I appreciate how easy this is for example in gmail/outlook.
Now, my situation might be a little bit specific. I have no offline
calendar configured
Hi everybody!
I'm trying to wrap my head around how RSVPing to calendar invites works. I
appreciate how easy this is for example in gmail/outlook.
Now, my situation might be a little bit specific. I have no offline calendar
configured whatsoever. This means, that I don't care that the calendar
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