Skip Montanaro <skip@...> writes: > I'll keep messing around with instances of HTML mail as I > encounter them to see what I can do.
Hmmm... I'm having trouble seeing that it does anything other than simply insert "w3m -dump" output. I browsed the entire output of describe-bindings but saw nothing w3m-related. I see no indication of an active emacs-w3m minor mode in the mode lines for either the summary or presentation buffers. Nothing is displayed in any alternate fonts to suggest the presence of a link. When I navigate to an obvious link, such as the all-too-ubiquitous "Click Here" then hit the return key it displays VM's usual "Go to message:" prompt in the minibuffer. So, I commented out all but the barest VM essentials in my .emacs file and renamed my .vm file to .vm- and restarted Emacs. Nothing changed. I am visiting an HTML email now. The message body looks like "w3m -dump" output. If I press 'D' it collapses to a single banner with a red background and white text which reads "HTML, ISO-8859-1 [Press RETURN to display text]". Another 'D' shows the raw MIME content. One more and I'm back to the "w3m -dump" output. There is no background w3m process running and no subprocess buffer to suggest there's a process to communicate with. I poked around in the customization settings and found something called "mm-inline-text-html-with-w3m-keymap" and set it to t. That had no effect even after saving for future sessions and restarting. (Now, oddly enough, when I try to search for settings matching "w3m" it no longer turns up and describe-variable doesn't know about it. I must be missing something, perhaps some other bit of customization? Skip
