[PATCH] Skip dot files in `notmuch new`

2011-09-02 Thread Tomi Ollila
On Fri 02 Sep 2011 03:52, Tom Prince writes: > On Tue, 23 Aug 2011 20:11:53 -0400, James Vasile > wrote: >> No known mail client or fetch tool stores mail in dot files, because >> files that start with '.' are usually used to store metadata >> (i.e. state or configuration) as opposed to

[PATCH] Skip dot files in `notmuch new`

2011-09-01 Thread Tom Prince
On Tue, 23 Aug 2011 20:11:53 -0400, James Vasile wrote: > No known mail client or fetch tool stores mail in dot files, because > files that start with '.' are usually used to store metadata > (i.e. state or configuration) as opposed to subject-matter data. Dovecot stores folders in directories

Re: [PATCH] Skip dot files in `notmuch new`

2011-09-01 Thread Tom Prince
On Tue, 23 Aug 2011 20:11:53 -0400, James Vasile ja...@hackervisions.org wrote: No known mail client or fetch tool stores mail in dot files, because files that start with '.' are usually used to store metadata (i.e. state or configuration) as opposed to subject-matter data. Dovecot stores

Re: [PATCH] Skip dot files in `notmuch new`

2011-09-01 Thread Tomi Ollila
On Fri 02 Sep 2011 03:52, Tom Prince tom.pri...@ualberta.net writes: On Tue, 23 Aug 2011 20:11:53 -0400, James Vasile ja...@hackervisions.org wrote: No known mail client or fetch tool stores mail in dot files, because files that start with '.' are usually used to store metadata (i.e. state

[PATCH] Skip dot files in `notmuch new`

2011-08-24 Thread Tomi Ollila
On Wed 24 Aug 2011 03:11, James Vasile writes: > No known mail client or fetch tool stores mail in dot files, because > files that start with '.' are usually used to store metadata > (i.e. state or configuration) as opposed to subject-matter data. > > Some mail fetch tools (including mbsync) and

[PATCH] Skip dot files in `notmuch new`

2011-08-23 Thread James Vasile
No known mail client or fetch tool stores mail in dot files, because files that start with '.' are usually used to store metadata (i.e. state or configuration) as opposed to subject-matter data. Some mail fetch tools (including mbsync) and clients use dot files in maildirs to store metadata.