I just built and installed Mutt 1.3.27i. I have iconv
in my C library with all MIME character set names supported.
I'm running mutt in a UTF-8 xterm with my LC_* variables all set
to en_US.utf8. Given this setup and the new iconv support, my
expectation was that when I displayed a Latin-1
Cameron Simpson wrote:
Of course you need par installed, but it works a treat. Just hit ^l and
it will reformat the lines for you.
Nick Wilson replied:
Wouldn't fmt do ok? It'll mangle quoted text (which I presume is the
advantage of par) but OTOH is already installed.
Yes. I use fmt for
rules, even though I think I've
manually corrected all of the paths in SpamAssassin.pm and
SpamAssassin/Conf.pm.
If you're not comfortable digging around your Perl install
and manually tweaking files, I recommend looking elsewhere.
--
Mark J. REED[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cron job output that uses a spamer-like attention-getting subject line.
--
Mark J. REED[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, Mar 28, 2002 at 02:07:59AM +0100, Sven Guckes wrote:
$ TIMEFMT=%D ./timediff 4/6/67 3/28/02
Difference is 11773.96 days.
Besides the fraction, that's just plain wrong.
1967-04-06 to 2002-03-28 is 12,775 days. Maybe
your %D is not the same as his %D? Where did 'timediff' come
Here's a short (44-line) Perl script that will do the job. It's not
flexible on the argument format - they have to be -mm-dd - and
it is Perl, but at least it doesn't use a zillion modules. The only
module it does use is POSIX, and that's only to get the floor() function;
if you aren't
On Mon, Apr 01, 2002 at 01:00:39PM -0500, Peter T. Abplanalp wrote:
ok. just to see how things work, i lsigned the key that i got from the
keyserver when i opened the email i am responding to. presumably your
key and email ;-). now when mutt invokes gpg, i get the same message of
good
that should help a lot.
--
Mark J. REED[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Wed, Mar 27, 2002 at 10:51:34AM -0500, Rocco Rutte wrote:
hostname, on any sane
system, displays the hostname when called with no args, and tries to set
it (requiring root at THAT point) when it has args.
Yes. And Solaris is sane in this fashion.
Solaris assumes that you're always
On Wed, Apr 03, 2002 at 05:55:25AM +0200, Sven Guckes wrote:
* Matthew D. Fuller [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2002-03-27 11:50]:
.. I end up having to work around Solaris'
braindamage in a number of ways.
For instance, on every OTHER OS (including
pre-Solaris-renaming SunOS, HP/UX 9, NeXT Mach),
On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 11:27:31PM -0500, Mark J. Reed wrote:
/usr/xpg4/bin/id -u
To expand upon this:
When SunOS becamse Solaris, its base moved from BSD (Berkeley's
UNIX-based OS) to System V (official UNIX from ATT).
For compatibility with System V applications (and with the POSIX standard
On Wed, Apr 03, 2002 at 08:12:00AM -0500, Shawn McMahon wrote:
Don't assume, however, that BSD style necessarily is 100% the same
as GNU style.
ps being the example, yet again; the w option doesn't show as much stuff
as you can get with two ws on GNU ps.
You can also put two 'w's on
On Thu, Apr 11, 2002 at 12:52:45PM -0300, Eduardo Gargiulo wrote:
Hi all.
I'm STILL trying to compile mutt-1.3.28i, but the process failed with the
following error:
What's your environment? Operating system+version, compiler+version?
It appears that you're missing the resource limit
On Fri, Apr 26, 2002 at 11:12:35AM -0400, Shawn McMahon wrote:
cd maildir
find . -exec grep -l stuff {} \;
That works, but find -exec is inefficient, because it runs grep once
per file, while grep is perfectly capable of looking at multiple
files per run. It's better to use -print and
On Fri, May 03, 2002 at 09:06:53AM +1200, V K wrote:
Is there a way to read other emails of the same folder while composing
one? (Other than cranking up a second mutt.)
Well, I don't know of any way to do this within mutt, but I'm not
much of a power-user. I usually crank up mutt in another
On Mon, May 06, 2002 at 08:34:20AM -0400, Dean Richard Benson wrote:
Hi there
I wonder if someone in here can help me out with a small mutt (or maybe
locale) problem I am having.
When I receive a message with apostrophes in they come over like this
(example line)
that we\222ve
The definition of GMT has always been an absolute, independent
of the actual local clock time in Greenwich, England (which is
currently British Summer Time, BST, one hour ahead of GMT/UTC).
You are correct that the acronym GMT is an anachronism, but it remains
a very popular one. For all
Note the comma in text/plain,. I'd say it's
an error in the incoming message.
On Tue, Jun 04, 2002 at 05:56:33PM -0400, Philip Mak wrote:
I just got this e-mail message, and when I looked at it in the pager,
all I saw was this:
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2002 02:40:08
From: Ryan Edwards [EMAIL
On Wed, Jun 05, 2002 at 08:18:05AM +0200, Rocco Rutte wrote:
So, there's no real equivalent term outside .de, I guess?
It is easily rendered in English as Text Over, Fullquote Under.
--
Mark REED| CNN Internet Technology
1 CNN Center Rm SW0831G | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Wed, Jun 05, 2002 at 08:18:05AM +0200, Rocco Rutte wrote:
So, there's no real equivalent term outside .de, I guess?
It is easily rendered in English as Text Over, Fullquote Under.
--
Mark REED| CNN Internet Technology
1 CNN Center Rm SW0831G | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
This was a test-resend - I originally sent this message yesterday
morning. So I was also a victim of the random message-munching
mentioned in the List slow? thread.
On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 09:15:23AM -0400, Mark J. Reed wrote:
On Wed, Jun 05, 2002 at 08:18:05AM +0200, Rocco Rutte wrote:
So
On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 04:14:30PM -0400, Kevin Coyner wrote:
1. Where do D (deleted) msgs go? Is there an equivalent of
trash, or am I truly out of the disneyland GUI world now and
just like using rm on files, there's no going back.
I believe that once you've synchronized the folder,
You want to sort by (r)ecv (that is, date RECeiVed),
rather than sort by (d)ate, which sorts by the Date: header.
On Wed, Jun 12, 2002 at 11:46:07AM -0400, Lane Brooks wrote:
I am using mutt to access a IMAP account, and I have sort by date.
However, it sorts it by the date of sender, and not
I have a message that is in UTF-8, it is marked as such in the
header (charset=utf-8); I have $charset set to utf-8 in my
muttrc, and I'm using a UTF-8 terminal emulator. But mutt
is doing something to the message such that it does not show
up properly in the internal pager; I get garbage
I should have mentioned that I'm using mutt 1.4i.
On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 03:50:09PM -0400, Mark J. Reed wrote:
I have a message that is in UTF-8, it is marked as such in the
header (charset=utf-8); I have $charset set to utf-8 in my
muttrc, and I'm using a UTF-8 terminal emulator. But mutt
On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 03:50:09PM -0400, Mark J. Reed wrote:
it shows up fine, but I don't want to use the functionality of
^^^
And I meant lose there. :)
--
Mark REED| CNN Internet Technology
1 CNN Center Rm SW0831G | [EMAIL
On Fri, Jun 14, 2002 at 12:06:37PM +0100, Richard Curnow wrote:
To display UTF-8 with ncurses, you need the wide-character version
libncursesw. ISO-8859-1 works either way.
Ah. And this is the behavior I'm seeing - mutt-1.4 displays Latin-1
characters just fine, correctly translating them
On Fri, Jun 14, 2002 at 10:10:42AM -0400, Mark J. Reed wrote:
Could you direct me to an appropriate site whence I
can download [libncursesw]?
Never mind, I answered my own question with some web searching;
standard ncurses source will build libncursesw if configured with
the --enable-widec
You can change the type of an attachment from the attachment menu
(after hitting 'v'). After moving the cursor to the attachment
and before hitting RETURN to open it, hit control-e, and enter
application/msword or whatever.
And politely ask whoever sent you that attachment to fix their
mail
AbiWord is a fine program, though it might be considered overkill for
everday viewing of Word attachments. I use antiword and only fire up
AbiWord if I really want to see or print out the original document in
all its formatted glory.
Also, you might want to upgrade; AbiWord 1.0.2 is out, and
On Fri, Jun 14, 2002 at 10:58:34AM -0400, Thomas Dickey wrote:
you really need the post-5.2 patches, since ncursesw was only tentative at
that point. The rollup patch should be sufficient -
ftp://invisible-island.net/ncurses/5.2
Well, I installed this patch, and rebuilt mutt, to no avail.
You may recall that some weeks ago I posted that I couldn't read a
UTF-8 message in my UTF-8 terminal even though everything appears
to be set up properly: $charset, locale environment variables,
locale definition matching those variables, message's Content-Type:
header, wide-character version of
[Resending with downgraded character set.
I don't know why mutt thought it needed to use UTF-8 to encode this
message; I avoided anything outside of the Latin-1 range, and I have
$send_charset set to us-ascii:iso-8859-1:utf-8. But here's take two.]
You may recall that some weeks ago I posted
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 12:57:51PM -0700, Deb wrote:
Ah!!! So obvious... but I wasn't sure.
Okay, I'm looking at it now - Nope, there's no Fcc: I'll set
that up next.
While you can set it up manually, that wasn't what I meant.
The value of $record should automatically appear as the value
On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 05:17:25PM -0400, Thomas Dickey wrote:
You said you were running Mandrake 7.1, but did not say what version of
glibc - and if you are using libiconv. One of your comments regarding
compile problems left me with the impression that the glibc may be too
old to properly
On Tue, Jul 09, 2002 at 08:06:33PM +0300, Odhiambo Washington wrote:
1. How do I tell mutt to automatically encrypt all messages addressed
to user1@domain1, user2@domain2 ???
send-hook . set pgp_autoencrypt=no
send-hook user1@domain1|user2@domain2 set pgp_autoencrypt=yes
The first line
I think you have to quote the second argument to folder-hook if it
contains spaces, which means you need quotes within the quotes for
cases like your default realname. Did you try this?
folder-hook . set realname=\Mark Johnson\
folder-hook in-mutt set realname=Mark
On Wed, Jul 10, 2002 at 10:40:16AM -0400, John P Verel wrote:
I have antiword set up as my mailcap entry for viewing MSWord docs and
it works great (thanks Sven :). What I'd also like to do, from time to
time, is pipe a *.doc to AbiWord.
The problem is that piping and opening attachments
On Wed, Jul 10, 2002 at 11:30:09AM -0400, John P Verel wrote:
s filename
!abiword filename
Yep, that works fine. Just looking for a shortcut. I suppose one could
construct a macro to do the above, right?
Sure, something like this should do the trick:
macro
On Wed, Jul 10, 2002 at 12:23:35PM -0400, John P Verel wrote:
On 07/10/02 11:37 -0400, Mark J. Reed wrote:
macro attach a s/tmp/foo.doc\r!abiwordSpace/tmp/foo.doc\r
Almost.
Sorry. My version worked fine on my system.
I got this to work:
macro attach a save-entry\cubol
I get the Key is not bound message on my Linux PC, too. Where did
you see the reference in the documentation?
There may be a more significant problem, though. On the PC, both
keys actually send something to the terminal window (Home key sends
ESC[1~; End key sends ESC[4~). On my Sun, pressing
On Fri, Jul 12, 2002 at 10:22:42AM -0400, Thomas Dickey wrote:
however, since he's getting key-not-bound, none of this applies...
Well, now, that's a very good point. Duh.
--
Mark REED| CNN Internet Technology
1 CNN Center Rm SW0831G | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Atlanta, GA
Thanks a mil! I have added this to my .bash_profile and it seems to work
just fine! (and since we are performing magic here anyway, you wouldn't
happen to know of a way to COMPOSE such characters, rather than just
reading them?)
If you use the vim editor for composing messages, then you can
On Wed, Jul 31, 2002 at 05:54:42PM +0200, Roman Neuhauser wrote:
btw, vim's regex support is completely b0rken IMO. its (no) magic
switches... weird syntax... ugh.
Given that vim's regexes are based on vi's which are based on ed's,
and ed was the first UNIX program to *have* regexes,
On Wed, Jul 31, 2002 at 02:42:10PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
When I installed the latest version of mutt, it changed or lost how to view
html messages (lynx), and now returns this error:
h: lynx-dump: command not found
Look in ~/.mailcap. It appears that you're set up to try to run
On Wed, Aug 14, 2002 at 04:11:50PM +0200, Marc wrote:
Hi all!
I have a little problem displaying the Euro symbol (among some others)
in mutt. It always ends up in \200 instead of the Euro symbol. I use
XTerm as my terminal. Maybe that's of interest for someone.
..]
Content-Type:
On Mon, Sep 09, 2002 at 08:59:24AM -0400, Bruno Lustosa wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
Actually my sig is at least ELEVEN lines, but hey, whose counting ?
( FYI - The last part of the sig has a word riddle in it)
//\ eLviintuaxbilse/\\
On Tue, Sep 10, 2002 at 01:09:05PM -0400, Keith R. John Warno wrote:
Is there any intuitive way to get the ``Date:'' header (as shown in the
pager) to always show the time converted to my local time zone?
Well, I don't know how intutive it is, but there is an easy way to do it.
Simply replace
On Tue, Sep 10, 2002 at 01:48:19PM -0400, Mark J. Reed wrote:
Simply replace %d with %D in the value of the $index_format
Whups, I lied. I mean, that would be correct if you were using
%d *outside* of %{...}, but stuff inside %{...} is strftime(3) format
characters, not mutt format characters
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