On 20 Jan 2021, at 07:20, Erwan David <erwan@rail.eu.org> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 01:58:38PM CET, "@lbutlr" <kremels@kreme.com> said:
On 20 Jan 2021, at 04:33, Piotr Auksztulewicz <dcml@hasiok.net> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 04:27:11AM -0700, @lbutlr wrote:
set imap_pass = "lasH-hds[er$asd" # Not a real password
Use single quotes around the password. Double quotes make $asd to be interpreted as shell variable and replaced with (most likely) empty string, so you get a shortened passwort in effect.
This worked, thank you.
Also… grrrrr. Who though expansion inside a password string was a clever idea and can I introduce them to a clue bat? :p
set imap_pass = $smtp_pass seems a good usecase.
But imap_pass = "$smtp_pass" seems like a silly use case.
PS. Also a mutt lover :-)
With the amount of HTML mail out there I really don't understand how people are able to use it anymore. Now, if I could get a 'stip html down to plain text' side function to work…
In my .mailcap I have text/html; w3m -I %{charset} -T text/html; copiousoutput;
Interesting, I do not know about .mailcap (I use mutt only to send some automated mails ro users who want the data formatted in an HTML table).
and in my .muttrc : auto_view text/html
Maybe that is what he does. I certainly looks very readable (which mutt is not, as a general rule, when viewing HTML mail).
It does seem to hide the links entirely, so you cannot, I assume click on any "Click here to confirm" links or whatever. Still, does look quite workable.
-- Be careful what you wish for. You never know who will be listening. Or what, for that matter.