tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post1435692343654093608..comments2022-03-28T08:42:20.497+03:00Comments on emacs-fu: searching e-mails with wanderlust and muUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger16125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-19925846977601422642013-10-16T06:16:35.839+03:002013-10-16T06:16:35.839+03:00The elmo-search-defautl-engine setting didn't ...The elmo-search-defautl-engine setting didn't work until a restart of emacs for me. Now it is working great. Thanks!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15211010229124571993noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-81659325112417875492013-10-16T06:14:34.421+03:002013-10-16T06:14:34.421+03:00I was seeing different results from the mu command...I was seeing different results from the mu command.<br />Then I realized I wasn't putting !mu after [term] so it must not have been using the mu engine by default. It did on a restart of emacs though. Now it is working great. Thanks!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15211010229124571993noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-41375416777349841532013-02-09T00:12:30.777+02:002013-02-09T00:12:30.777+02:00How do you do the initial mu index command?How do you do the initial mu index command?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-52459394300119680342012-02-29T08:00:55.421+02:002012-02-29T08:00:55.421+02:00@Marc: you can add spaces to your queries with
...@Marc: you can add spaces to your queries with <br /> C-q SPCdjcbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15938154009846040711noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-69119927297141820862012-02-28T14:02:19.745+02:002012-02-28T14:02:19.745+02:00Have installed mu linkages in my .wl file. It wor...Have installed mu linkages in my .wl file. It works great. WL gets better and better.<br />Have one question, however.<br />The command line for searches, with the "[" prompt does not allow any spaces after it. So... If I were looking to search for something like:<br />subject:options* date:1w..2w --fields "d s", I would not be able to put it is. Is there a way around the 'spaces' issue.<br />Thanks in advance.Marchttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02340889860639827074noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-75041331544332633752011-11-17T12:55:07.323+02:002011-11-17T12:55:07.323+02:00Hoping that this blog area can help me as the mail...Hoping that this blog area can help me as the mailing lists seem to have disappeared!<br />I've recently converted to Wanderlust (2.12.2) and am running in with Emac 23.3 on an Ubuntu 11.10 system.<br /><br />When I get an email with file attachments (say a .doc files) that has spaces in the name, and I select 'v', I get a message, from LibreOffice 3.4 that "/home/marc//tmp/EMIzzzz/XXXX/ YYYYYY.doc" does not exist.<br />When I try to 'v' on a docx file, I get a similar message but this time the file name "/tmp/EMI.../ZZZZ\ YYY\ ZZZZ.doc" does not exist.<br /><br />Notice that the programs are treating 'space' in file name differently and also note that the tmp directory is different (one is my home and one is the system).<br /><br />I have made changes to the ~/.mailcap file to use "%s" instead of %s but I don't think that the applications there are being called.<br /><br />Any help would be appreciated<br />Thank you<br />MarcMarchttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02340889860639827074noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-85819888361781518552011-10-05T02:51:02.139+03:002011-10-05T02:51:02.139+03:00Thanks for the mu+wl recipe. I have installed mu a...Thanks for the mu+wl recipe. I have installed mu and I have indexed my maildir. <br /><br />However, before installing mu I noticed that 'make check' did not succeed. mu-util-dir-expand-01 failed. Skipped.<br /><br />Then in wl I made a search for 'index' in Body, this is a folder with +7000 messages. It took a couple of minutes to complete. I ran it again and it took the same long time to complete. Is this normal? I was expecting this second time to complete in no time.<br /><br />thanksramesticahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07816368444094883988noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-11818535026255023162011-09-21T22:05:54.088+03:002011-09-21T22:05:54.088+03:00You should take a look at notmuch. It's a com...You should take a look at <a href="http://notmuchmail.org/" rel="nofollow">notmuch</a>. It's a command-line based email indexer that is very fast and has a very nice emacs interface.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-8533621260847220812011-06-20T17:19:40.743+03:002011-06-20T17:19:40.743+03:00Great, thanks! (Sure enough, there was an example ...Great, thanks! (Sure enough, there was an example in the cheatsheet that I did not read before posting ;-)ramonnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-62193310718664024982011-06-04T00:11:39.136+03:002011-06-04T00:11:39.136+03:00@ramon: i don't think you can see the maildir ...@ramon: i don't think you can see the maildir it's coming from *directly* from within wl (should not be too hard to figure out, but will require some elisp); from the command-line you can get the information easily using the "l" format specifier.djcbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15938154009846040711noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-7224050955857746882011-06-03T23:01:51.485+03:002011-06-03T23:01:51.485+03:00Really neat! One question and a comment, though.
...Really neat! One question and a comment, though.<br /><br />Comment: for those who do not read the man page, you need to build the database first (mu index)<br /><br />Question: is it possible to know where (i.e., what maildir folder) the found messages are coming from?ramonnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-36309381461395640782011-05-18T12:34:21.206+03:002011-05-18T12:34:21.206+03:00(setq wl-default-spec "[")
this fucks u...(setq wl-default-spec "[")<br /><br />this fucks up file moving ("o"), since it prepends [ to the modelineAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-71365880361626278342011-04-01T16:25:55.706+03:002011-04-01T16:25:55.706+03:00@slb: thank you! i've added the missing search...@slb: thank you! i've added the missing search thing to the post.djcbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15938154009846040711noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-46140828699197565222011-04-01T16:07:19.812+03:002011-04-01T16:07:19.812+03:00Thanks for the props. Again, the following replac...Thanks for the props. Again, the following replaces "namazu search (default)" completely.<br /><br />(setq elmo-search-default-engine 'mu)<br /><br />;; for when you type "g" in folder or summary.<br />(setq wl-default-spec "[") <br /><br /><br />Thanks for all the work on mu. I've re-discovered a lot of email.slbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10331609203382509239noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-89093935627777159422011-04-01T00:55:37.794+03:002011-04-01T00:55:37.794+03:00Thank you very much. Now I have no more excuses to...Thank you very much. Now I have no more excuses to switching to WL. One thing I wonder though is how different mu is from mairix.<br /><br />p.s. first post was premature :)situmam1https://www.blogger.com/profile/01590919360924341740noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3992530807750384868.post-39388497499708669032011-04-01T00:52:53.372+03:002011-04-01T00:52:53.372+03:00This comment has been removed by the author.situmam1https://www.blogger.com/profile/01590919360924341740noreply@blogger.com