notmuch/vim
Felipe Contreras cc8c213bbc vim: improve the way messages are sent
We want the proper encoding and content-type to be set when sending the
mail, but human-readable plain-text for composing. So split the code in
two parts: the presentation and the transport conversion.

This fixes an issue while sending non-ascii mails to strict servers; the
mail needs to be encoded.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
2014-05-03 06:00:22 +09:00
..
syntax Add new notmuch vim plugin 2013-06-02 19:42:43 -05:00
Makefile vim: add help file 2013-11-20 07:23:30 -06:00
notmuch.txt vim: add help file 2013-11-20 07:23:30 -06:00
notmuch.vim vim: improve the way messages are sent 2014-05-03 06:00:22 +09:00
notmuch.yaml vim: add help file 2013-11-20 07:23:30 -06:00
README vim: use the old vim plugin function name 2013-06-02 19:49:49 -05:00

== notmuch vim ruby ==

This is a vim plug-in that provides a fully usable mail client interface,
utilizing the notmuch framework, through it's ruby bindings.

== install ==

Simply run 'make install'. However, check that you have the depencies below.

=== vim +ruby ===

Make sure your vim version has ruby support: check for +ruby in 'vim --version'
features.

=== ruby bindings ===

Check if you are able to run the following command cleanly:

 % ruby -e "require 'notmuch'"

If you don't see any errors, it means it's working and you can go to the next
section.

If it's not, you would need to compile them. Go to the 'bindings/ruby'
directory in the notmuch source tree.

=== mail gem ===

Since libnotmuch library concentrates on things other than handling mail, we
need a library to do that, and for Ruby the best library for that is called
'mail'. The easiest way to install it is with ruby's gem. In most distro's the
package is called 'rubygems'.

Once you have gem, run:

 % gem install mail

In some systems gems are installed on a per-user basis by default, so make sure
you are running as the same user as the one that installed them.

This gem is not mandatory, but it's extremely recommended.

== Running ==

Simple:

 % gvim -c ':NotMuch'

Enjoy ;)

== More stuff ==

As an example to configure a key mapping to add the tag 'to-do' and archive,
this is what I use:

let g:notmuch_rb_custom_search_maps = {
	\ 't':		'search_tag("+to-do -inbox")',
	\ }

let g:notmuch_rb_custom_show_maps = {
	\ 't':		'show_tag("+to-do -inbox")',
	\ }