Hi there!
It happens that I have to attach several files to a mail, some of which
have quite long filenames. In order to read the filenames wholly, I
often have to enlarge my Xterm, and this is not what I want.
Now, I'd like to either have the possibility to scroll to the left and
right side in
Hi there, mutt users!
I recently received a mail with about 20 attached files. The sender
didn't want to tar it, so I got them attached one by one.
You can imagine that saving was quite annoying.
Is there a way to save all at once?
[andre@coffee andre]$ mutt -v
Mutt 1.3.28i (2002-03-13)
Copyri
On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 08:13:39AM -0700, Ryan Allen wrote:
> What are people using out there, and how are they set up?
> Cut and Paste is only efficient for so long
abook
http://abook.sourceforge.net/
HTH
Andre
On Tue, Sep 04, 2001 at 08:17:55AM +0200, Christoph Maurer wrote:
> The Problem is not PGP, but Outlook.
Ah? New to me ;)
> I defined two macros in my muttrc, so I can encrypt and sign
> messages in a way MS Outlook (and a lot of other Windows Email
> Clients) understand:
That's what I did to
Hi!
On Mon, Sep 03, 2001 at 12:44:33PM +0200, Volker Moell wrote:
> Two Words: outlook! :-(
You missed one word: sucks!
> Use Inline Signatures:
> set pgp_create_traditional=yes
Does not work.
> Note that PGP/MIME will be used automatically for messages which have
> a character set d
Hi fellows
Sorry about asking that (again?), but I didn't find a solution to this
problem searching the web.
I just installed GPG 1.0.6 on my linux box and configured mutt to work
with it. Fine so far. Next, I set up a test win2k box with Outlook
Express, PGP 6.5.8 and later with 7.0.3. Now, aft
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 10:32:00AM +0200, Marco Fioretti wrote:
> I respectfully suggest that nobody wastes one second to
> program ways to sort/prune/etc messages that where not
> threaded properly BY THEIR SENDERS.
Somebody did and sent a patch for 1.3.19 directly to me. I also asked
him to s
> a) The string spans multiple (4) lines
> b) makes mutt crash (segfault)
1) make sure your xface is really 48x48
2) quote! you have to quote all out of
;$\`'
HTH
when i finally achieved to get my face loke like my face, i actually
wanted to write it down for others to make it easier. i ne
hi list!
i have some files with e-mail adresses inside for procmail to sort my
mail to different mailboxes. in mutt, i use shortcuts to assign new
addresses to the lists. one list looks like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
now i'd like to add a send
hi list!
i got a simple problem for which i didn't find a solution in the man
pages.
i have four send-hooks defined to change my FROM-address and my sig
according to the recipient. my .muttrc looks like this:
[1] send-hook . "my_hdr From: Andre Bonhote <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>&qu
> Have a look at http://www.spinnaker.de/mutt/view-x-face.
this is fine! do you as well know a method to cleanly insert my x-face
into my muttrc using my_hdr? which characters have to be quoted? i
quoted [";'$`\] and i got a completely shafted face :(
tx
andré
--
I am the greataxe of the Dwar
hi there!
can anyone give me a hint on viewing x-face-headers with mutt? is there
a patch around or do i have to use xfaces (and how to do this?)
it's not urgent, but i am curious! ;)
regs
andré
--
Rice!
> if what you want is just to send the (previously unfiltered)
> spam to /dev/null, there is no need to interact with procmail.
no, that's not exactly what i want. i'd rather like to have a
script/macro/program which can be used to populate my .procmailrc. no
matter if it's spam or not! this was
hi out there
i am using mutt 1.2.5i together with fetchmail and procmail.
is there a way to kinda automatically add an entry to my procmailrc from
within mutt? someting like this:
- mail arrives
- ah, it's spam
- hit ^k (or something else, of course)
- let me decide, what procmail will be look
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