3086b87ca59e6c4f2d7736c82f7d25d5d3c6a102
etc. a buffer. From the docstring: "What do to when user leaves the headers view (e.g. quit or doing a new search). Value is one of the following symbols: - ask (ask the user whether to ignore the marks) - apply (automatically apply the marks before doing anything else) - ignore (automatically ignore the marks without asking)." the new mu4e-handle-marks uses this.
Welcome to mu! -------------- Given the enormous amounts of e-mail many people gather and the importance of e-mail message in our work-flows, it's essential to quickly deal with all that mail - in particular, to instantly find that one important e-mail you need right now. mu[1] is a tool for dealing with e-mail messages stored in the Maildir-format. mu's main purpose is to help you to quickly find the messages you need; in addition, it allows you to view messages, extract attachments, create new maildirs, … See the mu cheatsheet[2] for some examples. Searching works by first indexing your messages into a Xapian-database, which can then be queried using a custom query language. Built on top of mu there are some extensions: * mu-for-emacs (mu4e)[3]: a full-features e-mail client that runs inside emacs * mu-guile[4]: bindings for the Guile/Scheme programming language And, there is a toy GTK+-interface called 'mug' (in the 'toys/' subdir) Mu is written in C and a bit of C++, with mu4e written in Emacs-lisp and mu-guile in a mix of C and Scheme. Note, mu is available in Debian/Ubuntu under the name "maildir-utils" because they don't like short names. [1] http://www.djcbsoftware.nl/code/mu/ [2] http://www.djcbsoftware.nl/code/mu/cheatsheet.html [3] http://www.djcbsoftware.nl/code/mu/mu4e.html [4] http://www.djcbsoftware.nl/code/mu/mu-guile.html
Description
Languages
C++
61.5%
Emacs Lisp
29.1%
Scheme
5%
Meson
3.1%
Shell
0.3%
Other
1%