A tool `notmuch-addresses' is required to produce addresses which
match a query string. An example of a suitable script can be found in
the git repository at
http://jkr.acm.jhu.edu/git/notmuch_addresses.git
There are no doubt others.
The function was named and documented incorrectly before, saying that
it would "change the visibility of all messages". Instead it only
opens the messages that are closed---it doesn't simultanesously close
the messages that are open. (Granted, nobody would *want* that
behavior I don't think, but the naming was confusing before.)
`notmuch-show-toggle-all' changes the visibility all of the messages
in the current thread. By default it makes all of the messages
visible. With a prefix argument, it makes them all not visible.
Commit 44982ab332 added some extra
quoting when constructing a search. A previous version of this patch
had used single-quotation marks (') while this version used
double-quotation marks (").
The intent of the extra quoting was to allow notmuch-command to be set
to a script invoking ssh.
What actually happens, however is that the extra quotation marks make
it all the way into the query string seen by Xapian. And the double
quotes trigger phrase searching, (which isn't desired here). The
side-effect of that is that the emacs code would fallback to an
unqalified query and display all threads with all messages open.
We fix that side-effect now by using single-quote characters, but
we'll want a better fix in the future to avoid Xapian seeing these
characters at all I think.
Define a new `mail-user-agent' (`notmuch-user-agent') and use it by
default. Re-arrange various routines that send mail to use this
(compose, reply, forward). Insert a `User-Agent:' header by default.
This is the real commit for this functionality this time. The
previous attempt to merge this code:
commit 57926bc7b0
was botched (by Carl Worth, not David) to include only the Makefile
change. So the build was broken until this commit that actually adds
the new file.
Sebastian pointed out that the pre-JSON UI would move the cursor to
the end of the buffer if `n' or `N' is hit when on the last (unread)
message. Mimic that behaviour in the new UI.
Define a new `mail-user-agent' (`notmuch-user-agent') and use it by
default. Re-arrange various routines that send mail to use this
(compose, reply, forward). Insert a `User-Agent:' header by default.
Fix missing argumen in declaration of notmuch-search function and add
a definition of notmuch-search-continuation to avoid warning about
assignment to a free variable.
This is based on the prototype that Carl Worth described in the TODO
file. It provides a search bar as well as support for recent searches,
saved searches, and a list of all tags in the database (as well as the
number of messages with each tag).
The width of the authors field in search output was previously
specified in two places:
- `notmuch-search-authors-width': the limit beyond which the authors
names are truncated,
- `notmuch-search-result-format': the layout of the search results.
Changing the configuration of one of these may have required the user
to know about and adapt the other accordingly. This led to confusion.
Instead, remove `notmuch-search-authors-width' and perform truncation
based on the relevant field in `notmuch-search-result-format'.
Approved-By: Jameson Rollins <jrollins@finestructure.net>
With defcustom the user can easily find this variable (and its
documentation) within "M-x customize-group" "notmuch" (though finding
*that* is still tricky).
The new name of notmuch-poll-script is also easier to remember, (for
me at least).
Emacs scoping rules strongly encourage us to have fully-namespaced
function names. A prefix like "notmuch-search" is a pretty ugly
namespace name, but it's what we have for now.
The new functions first check if an external poll script has been defined in
the variable 'notmuch-external-refresh-script and if yes, runs that script
before executing the existing refresh function (which is bound to '=')
This can be used to have 'G' mimic the mutt behavior of polling an external
mail server - or if the mail polling is already automatic, it can trigger
the call to notmuch new and any necessary automatic tagging of new email.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <hohndel@infradead.org>
As the user has already defined aliases for certain searches in
notmuch-folders, search buffer names that use these aliases will
be easier to identify.
This patch helps in customizing search result display similar to
mutt's index_format. The customization is done by defining an alist as
below:
(setq notmuch-search-result-format '(("date" . "%s ")
("authors" . "%-40s ")
("subject" . "%s ")))
The supported keywords are date, count, authors, subject and tags.
Signed-off-by: Aneesh Kumar K.V <aneesh.kumar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Edmondson <dme@dme.org>
Use the mailcap functionality to guess a MIME type for attachments of
type application/octet-stream and, presuming successful, feed the
attachment back into the display code with the determine type.
This is mostly useless at the moment, as the JSON output from notmuch
does not include the content of application/octet-stream parts, so
they cannot be displayed even if the guess is a good one.
If a text/plain part is not the first part in a message, add a label
in order that a user can see that multiple parts are present.
If a part has a 'filename' attribute, include it in any label
describing the part.
In the recent switch to a JSON-based emacs interface, RET now toggles
message visibility anywhere in the message, (rather than only on the
summary line). So we no longer need this separate "b" binding for this.
Additionally, the body toggle was implemented independently from RET,
so after hiding a message with "b" one could not make it visible with
RET. This confusing state is now no longer possible, (since the
:body-visible property is removed entirely).
This reverts commit fbec989fe3.
I only pushed this accidentally. See message
id:871ver6u9r.fsf@yoom.home.cworth.org for the various reasons I
didn't like this patch, (mostly I think the association of 'F' is
wrong).
With the recent addition of "*" being a special case for a search
matching all messages, we have to take care when doing a filter
operation. In this case it's not legal to simply append and get:
* and <some-new-search-terms>
Instead we carefully construct a new search string of only:
<some-new-search-terms>
This could all be avoided if we had a parser that could understand
"*" with the meaning we want.
Clean up code duplication, as per Carl's suggestion, by making
notmuch-search-{add/remove}-tag-thread a special case of the -region
commands, where the region in question is between (point) and (point).
There was a bug in notmuch-search-{add,remove}-tag-region, which would
not behave correctly if the region went beyond the last message. Now,
instead of simply iterating to the last line of the region, these
functions will iterate to the minimum of the last line of the region
and the last possible line, i.e.
(- (line-number-at-pos (point-max)) 2)
Tested-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> Note that the old, buggy
behavior included infinite loops of emacs lisp code, so the new
behavior is significantly better than that.
Put single-quotes around the argument of the `show --entire-thread' command
in notmuch-show. This change should have no effect on normal usage.
However, it allows us to use the notmuch.el client with a remote notmuch
binary and database over ssh (by, e.g., setting `notmuch-command' to a
simple shell script). Without the quotes, ssh will not send the command
properly.
One very simple example script is as follows. (Note that it requires
keypair login to the ssh server.)
#!/bin/sh
SSH_BIN="/path/to/local/ssh"
NOTMUCH_HOST="my.remote.server"
NOTMUCH_REMOTE_PATH="/path/to/remote/notmuch"
$SSH_BIN $NOTMUCH_HOST $NOTMUCH_REMOTE_PATH $@
These commands act on all messages in the thread, not simply those
that match the search. (There are use case for both behaviors, but the
documentation must match the behavior that's actually implemented).
This patch adds `-region' versions of the `notmuch-search-' commands to find
properties. It also splits up `notmuch-add/remove-tags' into both a
`-thread' and a `-region' version. (This makes us modify
`notmuch-search-archive-thread' to use the
`notmuch-search-remove-tag-thread' function, instead of
`notmuch-search-remove-tag', for consistency.) The add/remove-tag command
called by pressing `+' or `-' will then choose accordingly, based on whether
region is active.
This version fixes a couple of errors in the first version, which led to
incorrect marking of some tags in the search view (though the actual
tagging was still correct). It's also based on current master.
I'm not sure any more if region selection is actually the correct way to
do this, or if a mutt-style message-marking method would be better. But
I didn't want a buggy incorrect version out there.
As put forth in the commit that enabled this functionality, the last
few lines of a citation are often much more important. In that case,
let's actually do the useful thing by default.
In many conversations the last few lines of a citation are more
interesting than the first few lines, hence allow those to be shown if
desired.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Arbitrary font faces can be specified for given thread tags. By
default, no coloring is applied. To specify coloring, place something
like this in your .emacs:
(setq notmuch-search-line-faces '(("delete" . '(:foreground "red"))
("unread" . '(:foreground "green"))))
Order matters: line faces listed first will take precedence (in the
example above, a thread tagged both "delete" and "unread" will be
colored red, since the "delete" face is listed before the "unread").
notmuch.el | 33 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
1 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
Change the buffer name to a uniquified subject of the thread (i.e. the
subject of the first message in the thread) instead of the thread-id. This
is more meaningful to the user, and will make it easier to scroll through
numerous open buffers.
Note that this patch adds an optional `buffer-name' argument to notmuch
show.
Signed-off-by: Jesse Rosenthal <jrosenthal@jhu.edu>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
The date was unfairly left out of getting pretty colors in the
notmuch-show header display. This fixes that grave injustice.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Spaeth <Sebastian@SSpaeth.de>
Instead, simply byte-compile the emacs source files as part of "make"
and install them as part of "make install". The byte compilation is
made conditional on the configure script finding the emacs binary.
That way, "make; make install" will still work for someone that doesn't
have emacs installed, (which was the only reason we had made a separate
"make install-emacs" target in the first place).
With the original quiet function, there's an actual purpose (hiding
excessively long compiler command lines so that warnings and errors
from the compiler can be seen).
But with things like quiet_symlink there's nothing quieter. In fact
"SYMLINK" is longer than "ln -sf". So all this is doing is hiding the
actual command from the user for no real benefit.
The only actual reason we implemented the quiet_* functions was to be
able to neatly right-align the command name and left-align the arguments.
Let's give up on that, and just left-align everything, simplifying the
Makefiles considerably. Now, the only instances of a captialized command
name in the output is if there's some actually shortening of the command
itself.