4ce296d6b2823cfee0eeb8f5ac05083f5cd46d36
Texinfo is of the opinion that every hyperlink has to be prefixed by either "see" or "in". If neither of these words appears there, then it inserts "see" and it cannot be told not to do that. This turns a correct sentence like: > Mu4e lets you define custom actions for messages in the <Headers view>. into: > Mu4e lets you define custom actions for messages in the see <Headers view>. The best compromise is > Mu4e lets you define custom actions for messages in <Headers view>. which isn't correct but at least less messed up. Alternatively one could rephrase every sentence that contains a link to circumvent Texinfo's speech impairment. Or one could replace each link with a footnote and place the actual link in the footnote.
Welcome to mu & mu4e! 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, and quickly file away message for later use. `mu` is a tool for dealing with e-mail messages stored in the Maildir-format. `mu`'s purpose in life is to help you to quickly find the messages you need; in addition, it allows you to view messages, extract attachments, create new maildirs, and so on. See the [mu cheatsheet] for some examples. =mu= is fully documented. After indexing your messages into a [Xapian](http://www.xapian.org)-database, you can search them using a custom query language. You can use various message fields or words in the body text to find the right messages. Built on top of `mu` are some extensions (included in this package): * mu4e: a full-featured e-mail client that runs inside emacs * mu-guile: bindings for the Guile/Scheme programming language (version 2.2 and later) `mu` is written in C and C++; `mu4e` is written in elisp, and `mu-guile` in a mix of C and Scheme. Note, `mu` is available in Linux distributions (e.g. Debian/Ubuntu and Fedora) under the name `maildir-utils`; apparently because they don't like short names.
Description
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Emacs Lisp
29.1%
Scheme
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Meson
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Other
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