* [EMAIL PROTECTED] on Saturday, September 01, 2007 at 14:24:47 -0400
I was able to get mutt and bash to agree on en_US.ISO8859-1,
but there is no option for that in Terminal.app's preferences.
I only see Western (ISO Latin 1) and Western (ISO Latin 9)
[In fact, I even opened up Terminal.app's
On Saturday, September 1, 2007 at 14:24:47 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I made all three agree on en_US.UTF-8, and the result was terrible.
Most accented chars still were garbled.
Strange: I've seen reports about this very setting working OK on
MacOS-X. The shell command locale charmap
I've found mutts IMAP-support to be less than stellar. A good
workaround is to use a IMAP-Maildir syncronizer like offlineimap.
http://software.complete.org/offlineimap
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=- Marco Vittorini Orgeas wrote on Sun 2.Sep'07 at 14:54:15 +0200 -=
On my imap server I have some other folders than just Inbox (they are
obviously subfolders of my INBOX) and i want to navigate them.
For doing this I do again a c + tab for view my *current* folder
subfolders, but it
I have read about it.Maybe i will try that.
But I have to say that I get the beaviour I want if I insert this
command in my muttrc:
set folder =imap://mavior.eu
The problem is then my base folder is to default my imap one.Then I
can't navigate with a tab my local folders and I am again to the
Moin mutters,
recently I noticed _again_ a lengthy post by Alain explaining
charset issues in so great detail that people are very thankful
for it. Luckily, I didn't have so many problems with charsets in the
past (or simply ignored them ;), so I didn't delve deeply into it to
be an expert on the
also sprach Gary Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007.08.31.0746 +0200]:
Patch submitted to mutt-dev.
Muchas gracias!
--
martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.)
\ echo mailto: !#^.*|tr * mailto:; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
it may look like i'm just sitting here doing nothing.
but