Saved searches in notmuch-hello and notmuch-jump can specify whether
to use search mode or tree mode. This adds an option for them to
specify unthreaded mode.
We have shortcuts S and Z to let the user switch to Search view and
Tree view with the current search. Add U to let the user switch to
unthreaded view from the current search, and ensure that S and Z
switch from unthreaded to search and tree veiew respectively.
Tree mode allows the user to choose whether to use the split screen
displaying just the current message or a full screen displaying the
entire thread. As unthreaded mode is quite different in use the user
may want a different customisation for this mode.
It is likely that the user will want a different line format for
unthreaded mode from tree mode; in particular the thread structure
graphics are unnecessary in unthreaded mode.
Add a new customisable variable and set it to something sensible.
This commit introduces a new 'unthreaded' search mode where each
matching message is shown on a separate line. It shares almost all of
its code with tree view. Subsequent commits will allow it to diverge
slightly in appearance.
It causes this function to fail with:
let: Wrong type argument: null, t
Support for this was removed from Emacs in April
2019 (5c5e309527e6b582e2c04b83e7af45f3144863ac) because it never
worked correctly (apparently).
This also shouldn't be necessary as sentinels will not be called
unless emacs is idle or waiting for input. Therefore, the
`process-put' calls immediately following the `make-process' call
should always complete before the sentinel is first called.
This commit changes the behaviour of notmuch-mua-attachment-check
so that it stops searching for notmuch-mua-attachment-regexp when a
new mime-part is reached. This avoids false warnings when matching
words occur inside forwarded messages.
Rather than blocking emacs while gpg does its' thing, by default run
key retrieval asynchronously, possibly updating the display of the
message on successful completion.
This is an unbound function that is quite useful. It opens a selected
thread in notmuch-tree from the current search query.
Signed-off-by: William Casarin <jb55@jb55.com>
Debian's lintian has an informational alert
desktop-entry-lacks-keywords-entry, which recommends including
Keywords= in a .desktop file.
I dug around a bit in /usr/share/applications/*.desktop to make sure
that we covered the range of keywords other e-mail applications are
using. If anyone has other suggestions for keywords, they can add
them to this list.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
The extra flexibility of having both HAVE_EMACS (for yes, there is an
emacs we can use) and WITH_EMACS (the user wants emacs support) lead
to confusion and bugs. We now just force WITH_EMACS to 0 if no
suitable emacs is detected.
When we have not been able to evaluate the signature status of a given
MIME part, showing a content-free (and interaction-free) "[ Unknown
signature status ]" button doesn't really help the user at all, and
takes up valuable screen real-estate.
A visual reminder that a given message is *not* signed isn't helpful
unless it is always present, in which case we'd want to see "[ Unknown
signature status ]" buttons on all messages, even ones that don't have
a signing structure, but i don't think we want that.
Amended by db to drop the unused initialization of 'label'
`notmuch-search-interactive-region' was moved to notmuch-lib.el in
f3cba19f88 and renamed to
`notmuch-interactive-region' without making the old function
obsolete, thereby breaking user-commands which made use of it.
This commit marks the function as obsolete and makes it an alias for
the new function.
Apparently, message-default-charset is deprecated, which causes the
following warning messages during the build:
In notmuch-maildir-setup-message-for-saving:
emacs/notmuch-maildir-fcc.el:172:31:Warning: ‘message-default-charset’ is an
obsolete variable (as of 26.1); The default charset comes from the
language environment
In discussion with emacs upstream over on
https://debbugs.gnu.org/35370, it appears that we can just drop this
entirely and things should still work with emacs 25.
Since only the first line of the documentation is shown by the
help command, it is confusing when "x" and "a" seem to have the same
binding in show-mode. This commit makes the two function documentations
first lines different and (hopefully) clearer.
Instead of relying on the "In-Reply-To" header, use a buffer-local variable,
notmuch-message-queued-tag-changes, to add and remove tags to affected
messages when the message-send-hook is triggered.
Include the message-id of forwarded messages in the new message.
This ensures that the new (forwarding) message is linked to the
same thread as the message being forwarded.
Fix notmuch-describe-key crashing for the following two cases
1. format-kbd-macro cannot deal with keys like [(32 . 126)], switch to
use key-description instead.
2. if a function in the current keymap is not bounded, it will crash
the whole process. We check if it is bounded and silently skip it to
avoid crashing.
Query the user if the message text indicates that an attachment is
expected but no MML referencing an attachment is found.
This is not enabled by default - see the documentation for
`notmuch-mua-attachment-check'.
Add a new binding when looking at messages, B, that prompts with a
list of URLs found in the current message, if any. Open the one that
is selected in a browser.
amended by db: s/--browse-urls/-browse-urls/
When invoking gpg as a backgrounded tool, it's important to let gpg
know that it is backgrounded, to avoid spurious prompts or other
breakage.
In particular, https://bugs.debian.org/913614 was a regression in
GnuPG which causes problems when importing keys without a terminal,
but gpg expects one.
Ensuring that notmuch-emacs always invokes gpg as a background process
should avoid some of these unnecessary failure.
Thanks to Justus Winter for finding this problem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
These are intended to included in the sphinx manual for notmuch-emacs.
The stamp file makes it easier to depend on the docstrings from other
parts of the build
This small library is intended to support batch extraction of Emacs
Lisp docstrings from source files. Clients will need to include (or
replace) rstdoc.rsti.
When filtering by tags in notmuch-search-filter-by-tag, only return tags
related to the current query.
Before, it was returning all tags. There's no reason to refine the
current query with tags that don't exist in the current result set.
Signed-off-by: William Casarin <jb55@jb55.com>
`mm-inline-text-html-with-images' was removed from mm-decode.el in
2016 and replaced with `mm-html-inhibit-images'.
`gnus-select-frame-set-input-focus' was removed from gnus-util.el in
2016 and existed only for XEmacs compatibility.
On some platforms (e.g. macOS), it is necessary to add a real sentinel
process for the error buffer used by `notmuch-start-notmuch' rather
than a no-op sentinel.
Correct URLs that have crept into the notmuch codebase with http://
when https:// is possible.
As part of this conversion, this changeset also indicates the current
preferred upstream URLs for both gmime and sup. the new URLs are
https-enabled, the old ones are not.
This also fixes T310-emacs.sh, thanks to Bremner for catching it.
This brings the --decrypt argument to "notmuch reply" into line with
the other --decrypt arguments (in "show", "new", "insert", and
"reindex"). This patch is really just about bringing consistency to
the user interface.
We also use the recommended form in the emacs MUA when replying, and
update test T350 to match.
We also expand tab completion for it, update the emacs bindings, and
update T350, T357, and T450 to match.
Make use of the bool-to-keyword backward-compatibility feature.