Sphinx-doc already formats the terms appropriately for a given
backend (bold in html and man). `makeinfo` complains noisily about
formatting inside a @item if we add our own explicit formatting.
This change may change the formatting in the info output. On the other
hand, the existing use of quotes for bold is not that great anyway.
In some places blank lines were removed to preserve the logical
structure of a definition list.
This reduces the amount of global state. Furthermore, index options
can be set (in principle) in several ways, not just in the one
function for processing indexing command line options.
There are some enum typedefs with the enum name:
typedef enum _name_t { ... } name_t;
We don't need or use the enum names _name_t for anything, and not all
of the enum typedefs have them. We have the typedefs specifically to
use the typedef name.
Use the anonymous enum in the typedefs:
typedef enum { ... } name_t;
There are some enum typedefs with the enum name:
typedef enum _name_t { ... } name_t;
We don't need or use the enum names _name_t for anything, and not all
of the enum typedefs have them. We have the typedefs specifically to
use the typedef name.
Use the anonymous enum in the typedefs:
typedef enum { ... } name_t;
Remove the comment markers from the placeholder NOTMUCH_DEPRECATED(),
added in commit e5f3c3ed50 ("lib: add stub for
notmuch_database_open_with_config").
In order to make it easier to keep the whitespace consistent in the
configure script, use the same style defined in devel/STYLE for
C/C++.
Specifically, a line should begin with zero or more tabs followed
by fewer than eight spaces.
Presumably this will be no more difficult for people editing configure
than for people editing the C and C++ code.
'check-notmuch-commit' is an updated version of a script I have been
using (although not always as consistently as I should) before sending
patches to the list.
Although it requires a bit more tooling, encouraging people to use
check-notmuch-commit might reduce the number of round trips to the
list for style nitpicks.
As discussed at [1] we have received reports that the implicit check
using cffi.FFI().verify() is not reliable in all environments. Since
we already use pkg-config, and the python dev package should include a
.pc file [2], add an extra check using pkg-config. On at least
Debian, we have to know which version of python dev files with are
looking for, so calculate that first.
[1]: id:87im1g35ey.fsf@tethera.netid:87im1g35ey.fsf@tethera.net,
[2]: checked on Debian and Fedora
As reported in id:87h7pxiek3.fsf@tethera.net, the previous version of
the test is flaky. There is some so-far undebugged interaction between
openssl and gpgsm that causes the keys to fail to import. As a
potential workaround, use the key as exported by gpgsm, and eliminate
openssl from this particular pipeline.
New customizable variable, notmuch-tree-thread-symbols, that allows
tweaking of how trees in a forest are represented. For instance, one
can now choose to use an hyphen rather than a white space as a prefix,
or replace the character(s) used to draw arrows.
Amended-By: db; delete errant '3'
As with notmuch--process-lines, initial purpose is to provide a safe
binding for default-directory. This is enough to make notmuch-hello
robust against non-existent or corrupt values default-directory, but
probably not other views.
Initially just set the working directory, to avoid (the implicit)
call-process crashing when the default-directory points to a
non-existent location.
Use of a macro here is over-engineering for this change, but the same
change needs to be applied to several other process creation
primitives.
Because of the way emacs reports errors, a test form can crash and not
change the main buffer. To work around this, capture both signalled
errors and any other messages.
As discussed in the thread starting at [1], the fully qualified domain
name is a bit tricky to get reproducibly, might reveal information
people prefer to keep private, and somewhat unlikely to provide
reliable mail routing.
The new approach of $current_username@localhost is better for the
first two considerations, and probably at least as good as a test mail
address.
[1]: id:87sfyibqhj.fsf@tethera.net
Based on the commit message in id:20210221151902.2301690-3-dme@dme.org
Add the function notmuch-test-result-flags to test-lib.el to avoid
repeating it in 3 T*.sh files.
If the car of an element in notmuch-tree-result-format or
notmuch-unthreaded-result-format is a function, insert the result of
calling the function into the buffer.
If the car of an element in notmuch-search-result-format is a
function, insert the result of calling the function into the buffer.
This allows a user to generate custom fields in the output of a search
result. For example, with:
(defun -notmuch-result-flags (format-string result)
(let ((tags-to-letters '(("flagged" . "!")
("unread" . "u")
("mine" . "m")
("sent" . "s")
("replied" . "r")))
(tags (plist-get result :tags)))
(format format-string
(mapconcat (lambda (t2l)
(if (member (car t2l) tags)
(cdr t2l)
" "))
tags-to-letters ""))))
(setq notmuch-search-result-format '((-notmuch-result-flags . "%s ")
("date" . "%12s ")
("count" . "%9s ")
("authors" . "%-30s ")
("subject" . "%s ")
("tags" . "(%s)")))
The first few characters on each line of the search result are used to
show information about some significant tags associated with the
thread.
With [1: 16b2db09] we lost the (undocumented) option to use no Fcc
header only for From addresses matching a regexp. This brings back
that feature and documents it.
1: 2021-01-15 16b2db0986
emacs: various cosmetic improvements