This adds functions to go to the previous or next thread to
pick. Prev-thread behaves similarly to prev-message in show: if you
are on the top line of a thread it will go to the top of the previous
thread, otherwise it will go to the top of the current thread. Next
thread will always go to the top of the next thread (or the end of
buffer). These are bound to "M-p" and "M-n" by default (matching the
bindings in show).
Previously pick had no actions based on the entire thread: this adds
some. Note in this version '*' is bound to `tag thread' which is not
consistent with search or show. However it still might be the most
natural thing (as it is similar to running * in the show pane).
Previously notmuch-pick had no thread based functionality. This adds a
macro to iterate through all messages in a thread. To simplify this it
adds a text-property marker to the first message of each thread.
Previously pick had the option of using an async parser like search or
a sync parser like show. The async parser has always been the default
and it seems fine so we can remove the sync one and the corresponding
defcustom.
This makes tab move to next button in the message pane and binds
button activate (in message pane) to "e". This means that is easy to
toggle hidden parts or hidden citations etc in the message pane.
We will want to be able to activate buttons not in the current
buffer (ie in the message pane) so it is helpful to have a way of
activating a button without signalling error if there is no button.
These functions all now work straight from their notmuch-show
implementation so link them in.
Stash functionality was one of the key missing things in notmuch-pick.
We can use the attachment functions straight from
notmuch-show. notmuch-show-view-all-mime-parts might be deprecated so
we either want to undeprecate it or not have this binding.
We override notmuch-show-get-prop so that many of the show functions
can be used in notmuch-pick without modification. The main use is that
it means notmuch-show-get-message-id `works' in pick. Thus we get all
the stash functions and several other `for free' in pick.
The variable notmuch-pick-message-buffer should be buffer local but
instead notmuch-pick-message-buffer-name (a non-existent variable) was
made buffer local.
The function notmuch-pick-refresh-result (used to update tag changes)
was not quite correct: sometimes it got the choice between the subject
and " ..." wrong. This was always true but the new code often calls
this (when opening a message in the message pane to remove the unread
tag) while the async pick process is still running and this caused
mistakes which made the tests fail.
Thus we store the previous subject with the message.
This function was a horrible hack (sleeping while waiting for the
correct message). The new target code can just open the message in the
message window when it arrives.
Previously pick removed the unread tag from its tag display: since the
tag change is now customisable use the customised variable.
This only affected the tags displayed, not the tags in the database as
notmuch-show (in the view pane) did the actual tag changes.
Previously pick set a prefix argument prior to calling show in the
message pane to tell show to only show matching messages. This sets
notmuch-show-only-matching-messages instead which is much cleaner and
will work even if the user has configured show to default to showing
only matching messages.
This adds a target message for pick which it will jump to when (if) it
appears. It adds the target to notmuch-pick-from-show-current-query so
that pick goes straight to the message that was current in the show
view and it adds target to notmuch-pick-refresh-view so that the
current message is preserved.
Pick keeps point roughly at the top of the buffer while inserting
messages at the end as they come in (from the async
parser). Previously the save-excursion to do this was done once for
each thread inserted: now it is done for each individual message.
The advantage is that the message insertion code can decide where to
leave point. In the next patch point will be left on the target message.
Note notmuch-pick-insert-msg is unchanged as that is used by the tag
display update code.
We add a hook to the show buffer in the message window to close the
message window when that buffer quits. It checks that the
message-window is still displaying the show-message buffer and then
closes it.
Previously running search or pick from the pick buffer did not close
the message pane (if open). This meant that then new search ends up in
a very small window. Fix this so that the message pane is
shut. However, make it so that the pane is shut after the search
string is entered in case the user is basing the search on something
in the current message.
Currently pick just uses notmuch-show to display messages in the
message pane: this means that they get indented just as show
would. However, since pick is only displaying one message at a time
there is no need to indent so override the indentation.
Update pick's archive message to respect notmuch-archive-tags. Also
split archive message into an archiving part and a separate
"then-next" part, to move more inline with show. Update the keybinding
so default behaviour is unchanged.
Previously if you carried on past the last message in a pick view pick
would get confused and `forget' about the split pane and would try and
re-split when moving up again. This was due to faulty logic in
notmuch-pick-show-message: something that should have been in the (when message)
clause was not.
Thanks to jrollins for the bug report.
The test should be run using the wrapper run-tests.sh. This links
the tests into the normal notmuch TEST_DIRECTORY and runs them from
there. After the test is complete then the links are removed.
If the user pressed return on the end result status line it gave a
blank message. Modify the function notmuch-pick-get-message-id to
return nil rather than an empty message-id in this case to fix this.
This also fixes a bug in the (lack of) quoting of the id string.