Hello George,
George Kadianakis writes:
> [...]
> So what to do?
>
> One way forward is to switch from using notmuch-address to using
> something like bbdb and manually curate my database (since bbdb offers
> this capability).
> [...]
Another option is to use company [1], or any other completio
On Thu, Sep 24 2020, David Bremner wrote:
> George Kadianakis writes:
>
>> So I guess this ordering should happen internally in notmuch-address,
>> right? Perhaps as a new type of "--sort" option like "--most-frequent"
>> or "--best-fit".
>>
>> If this is the right way to do it, perhaps I'll take
George Kadianakis writes:
>
> So I guess this ordering should happen internally in notmuch-address,
> right? Perhaps as a new type of "--sort" option like "--most-frequent"
> or "--best-fit".
>
> If this is the right way to do it, perhaps I'll take a stab at it over
> the next days. If it's not t
Jameson Graef Rollins writes:
> On Wed, Sep 23 2020, George Kadianakis wrote:
>> One way forward is to switch from using notmuch-address to using
>> something like bbdb and manually curate my database (since bbdb offers
>> this capability).
>>
>> But I think the right way would be to somehow int
On Wed, Sep 23 2020, George Kadianakis wrote:
> One way forward is to switch from using notmuch-address to using
> something like bbdb and manually curate my database (since bbdb offers
> this capability).
>
> But I think the right way would be to somehow introduce a bunch of
> heuristics in notmu
Hello list,
when I write an email with notmuch on emacs, I use tab-completion to
auto-complete email addresses. It's just impossible to remember all the
email addresses.
The problem is that, while doing that and over the past few months, I've
sent many emails to obsolete email addresses that peop