to ~/.mutt_certificates, and to manually
verify the fingerprint on each other connection? (Hm, using a specific
mutt_certificates file per server would also help, I guess.)
Thanks in advance,
Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · m...@cheers.de · https://cheers.de
Hello Mick,
you wrote (Sun 2013-Dec-22 09:05:25 +):
On Saturday 21 Dec 2013 20:50:39 Marcus C. Gottwald wrote:
..
The server admin generated a new self-signed certificate and installed
it, and what surprised me was that Mutt immediately accepted the
new certificate without prompting
have set as alternates?
alternates is a pattern, so which input would you like to get checked
against that pattern?
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · m...@cheers.de · https://cheers.de
ssary to work around the
race condition regarding the filename recycling. The solution
might not suit you at all because it doesn't actually invoke
a web browser of your choice; but maybe it does provide some
inspiration.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · <m...@cheers.de> · https://cheers.de
one can easily think of
relations between emails that will not result in an easy-to-read
drawing even in a graphical environment...
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · <m...@cheers.de> · https://cheers.de
if there is no X-Label,
the index row will look just like before.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · <m...@cheers.de> · https://cheers.de
ptable -- if not,
initially setting the indicator's colors to "black on black" might
be required, too -- but setting them back to the default coloring
must only happen after the has been applied...
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · <m...@cheers.de> · https://cheers.de
ght be best.
Maybe using Bash's builtin "printf" with its "%q" might help, but I
am not sure how Mutt reacts to backslash-escaped single quotes.
I would suggest asserting that the value neither contains quotation
marks nor spaces. :-)
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · <m...@cheers.de> · https://cheers.de
Pétùr wrote (Mon 2017-Nov-20 12:19:10 +0100):
> Is there a way to quickly clear the subject of an email?
Pressing Ctrl+U while editing the field should do what you are
looking for.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald · <m...@cheers.de> · https://cheers.de
e able
to reliably identify these emails. You could get them highlighted in
the index via "color index", use a save-hook for easy filing, etc.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· https://cheers.de
nge to $sendmail around calling the
function could be performed using a macro.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· https://cheers.de
key press) triggering the execution of a macro along
the lines of:
~N ~z <10K ~b whatever
all
The idea is that Mutt will need to look at the email bodies (~b) and
will have to fetch them in order to be able to look at them.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· https://cheers.de
ly have to set the background color of several
objects to "default" (in your muttrc). I'd suggest to start
with the object called "normal".
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
Trey Sizemore wrote (Mon 2020-Aug-10 09:58:48 -0400):
> > [...] I'd suggest to start with the object called "normal".
>
> It looks like default is used in the majority of cases in my .muttrc:
[This space intentionally left blank.]
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
sing Mutt from current Debian stable, 1.10.1.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
I've been using that approach (bound to the "+" character)
for the last few days, and it works fine for me. Lines consisting of
only whitespace get highlighted (obviously), but that's no reason
not to use the feature.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
Raphaël Fournier-S'niehotta wrote (Thu 2020-Nov-26 15:54:26 +0100):
> ... Or is there a key to "skip to the body of the email" quickly, in the
> pager?
+1 for adding such a function if it doesn't already exist.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
depending on what
looks better as part of %y in the index. :-)
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
I'll change my procmail recipes
to modify an existing X-Label header line instead of adding
additional ones.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
e any advantages
in using a specific delimiter (space, comma, ...)?
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
spaces and right-aligned, overwriting a long subject.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
remove duplicates (= identical content in
differently named files) if there's a chance for duplicates being
created.
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
fingers, I moved from using "y" to "Y":
bind compose y noop
bind compose Y send-message
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
guration variable called "markers" what you're looking
for? Quoting from the manual:
markers
Type: boolean
Default: yes
Controls the display of wrapped lines in the internal pager.
If set, a “+” marker is displayed at the beginning of wrapped
lines.
Cheers,
ly), then you could use Mutt running in the xterm
window...
Cheers, Marcus
--
Marcus C. Gottwald ·· @mcg:cheers.de
t; The Macintosh mail reader also displays flowed text correctly, and rewraps
> > on the fly when you change the size of the window.
>
> And the question is?
I guess Kurt's message should have referenced another of Kurt's
messages, . I still
have that older message flagged, too. :
t been seen by
any mail application" [1], let "find" also look at new/. Entries
in new/ never contain an info part (the stuff after the colon),
so you can drop the check for an unset "F" flag if you need to
invoke "find" separately for new/ anyway.
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