e --nologo --base '%s';
edit=soffic
any ideas ?
Thank you.
--
Guy Gold
Cambridge, Massachusetts
n too,
ened up with the same issue- one default key used.)
Thank you.
--
Guy Gold
Cambridge, Massachusetts
t; Jon H. LaBadie j...@jgcomp.com
> 11226 South Shore Rd. (703) 787-0688 (H)
> Reston, VA 20190 (703) 935-6720 (C)
>
--
Guy Gold
Cambridge, Massachusetts
e also
> sidebar-next-new and sidebar-prev-new
>
> jon
--
Guy Gold
Cambridge, Massachusetts
On Sat, May 24, 2014 at 10:01:47AM +1000, Cameron Simpson wrote:
On 23May2014 19:08, Guy Gold g...@merl.com wrote:
Confidential? Really?
Only if you really want it to be...(send hooks, work in progress)
Thu, May 22, 2014 at 05:19:42PM EDT To mutt-users@mutt.o Display of
threads, order
of my .muttrc breaking it.
--
Guy Gold
MERL Computer Services
g...@merl.com
On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 10:22:54AM -0500, David Champion wrote:
* On 23 May 2014, Guy Gold wrote:
That, pretty much, is what I'm trying to get to, only reversed,
with the newest message, on the bottom. I wonder if other parts
of my .muttrc breaking it.
Sort_aux=last-date-received
On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 03:05:13PM -0500, David Champion wrote:
Thu, May 22, 2014 at 05:19:42PM EDT To mutt-users@mutt.o Display of
threads, order in question
Thu, May 22, 2014 at 07:22:07PM EDT Cameron Simpson └─
Thu, May 22, 2014 at 08:54:23PM EDT To mutt-users@mutt.o └─
===CONFIDENTIAL===
On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 03:14:20PM -0500, Derek Martin wrote:
I'm trying to understand if it's 'normal' (wink: Derek
Martin, if you copy) to have most of my threads sorted
not-really-through-date-received.
Why are you winking at me?
This is from
Greetings, mutt users.
Here are the relevant parts from .muutrc: set sort=threads
set sort_aux=reverse-last-date-received
The above places the thread with the newest message on top,
with the next newest under it, an so on. Reading through
.muttrc, It's not the best way to sort, but, I got used
On Fri,May 23 09:22:AM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
I have no idea if it is normal. Besides, that should be irrelevant. Does it
work for you? If so, why? When not, why not?
Does not work for me, no. I'm trying to get 'date' to be the
main sorting criteria. In the example I provided, ideally, the
On Fri,May 09 04:24:PM, Jean-Rene David wrote:
* Guy Gold [2014.05.09 15:43]:
If, vim -c ':r /path/to/file' is used, what happens in mutt
is, vim gets two files to edit, /path/to/file and
/tmp/mutt-muttfile.being.edited.
Not at all. Did you try it?
You would have two files to edit
Derek:
On Sat,May 10 06:49:PM, Derek Martin wrote:
Mostly I reply here due to a curiosity: Why is 'messed' in single
quotes here? I see people do this increasingly often, and I don't get
why.
Are you implying that the single quotes should have been
escaped then ? ;)
--
GG
On Fri,May 09 04:24:PM, Jean-Rene David wrote:
Not at all. Did you try it?
You would have two files to edit if you did:
vim -c :e /path/to/file
or
vim /path/to/file
But not with:
vim -c :r /path/to/file
I did try it, and arrived to the !cat idea for that reason,
but, for
On Fri,May 09 02:58:PM, Suvayu Ali wrote:
In my experience, I found it is easier to escape nested quotes instead
of mixing multiple types of quotes. Maybe you can replace the single
quotes with escaped double quotes. You might also need to quote the
whole set editor=... bit.
Thank you.
On Fri,May 09 03:14:PM, Jean-Rene David wrote:
* Guy Gold [2014.05.09 13:58]:
send-hook '~t...@domain.com' 'set editor= vim -c \:r \!cat
/path/to/file\'
Is it me or is this a useless use of cat?
vim -c ':r !cat /path/to/file' = vim -c ':r /path/to/file'
Yes, and no.
While issuing
Greetings List.
I'm trying to add this command:
vim -c ':r !cat /tmp/file' to be used in a send hook :
send-hook ~t...@domain.com set editor= vim ':r !cat /tmp/bla'
The contents of /tmp/file should then be 'cat ' into the new
email.
While the above works fine from the main declaration in
my
On Fri,May 09 12:24:AM, Christian Brabandt wrote:
I am surprised, this works for your normal editor command. From my
understanding, Vim should try to open 2 files, namely ':r !cat /tmp/bla'
and the /tmp/mutt-... (which is your actual mail template.
To make this work, you should at least
android phone where smart enough to
know that the messages were read.
I was mainly doing this so I'll be able to run some scripts on the
server's side and wanted email-files to be left under /new and not
moved to /cur .
--
Guy Gold
, according to .muttrc,
and, have been Googleing this matter on/ off for a while now.
If the above is not possible, that would be an answer as well.
Thank you,
--
Guy Gold
of
counter-intuitive for me ) .
Thank you .
--
Guy Gold
--
Guy Gold
changing to a mail folder the cursor or location
bar stays at the very last OR the oldest new message. I don't
have to scroll/jump to the end of the index.
Greetings Gregor, I see what you mean.
In my setup, Mutt jumps to the first message as well.
--
Guy Gold
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