When composing a message, there is an empty fill line between the
headers and the text editor. The line is printed with the default style
which may cause users to assume it is part of the editor.
Display the fill lines with the border color to avoid confusion.
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
Also update to the tcell v2 PaletteColor api, which should keep the chosen
theme of the user intact.
Note, that if $TRUECOLOR is defined and a truecolor given, aerc will now stop
clipping the value to one of the theme colors.
Generally this is desired behaviour though.
Prior to this commit, the composer was based on a map[string]string.
While this approach was very versatile, it lead to a constant encoding / decoding
of addresses and other headers.
This commit switches to a different model, where the composer is based on a header.
Commands which want to interact with it can simply set some defaults they would
like to have. Users can overwrite them however they like.
In order to get access to the functions generating / getting the msgid go-message
was upgraded.
Introduce the ability to configure stylesets, allowing customization of
aerc's look (color scheme, font weight, etc). Default styleset is
installed to /path/to/aerc/stylesets/default.
Introduce the ability to configure stylesets, allowing customization of
aerc's look (color scheme, font weight, etc). Default styleset is
installed to /path/to/aerc/stylesets/default.
The grid used static sizes which meant that changing settings didn't
have an effect on elements of the ui, notably the sidebar width. This
patch makes the `Size` parameter of a cell a function which returns the
`int`, allowing for dynamic sizes.
A `Const` function is also included for ease of use for static sizes.
The following functionalities are added to configure aerc ui styles.
- Read stylesets from file with very basic fnmatch wildcard matching
- Add default styleset
- Support different stylesets as part of UiConfig allowing contextual
styles.
- Move widgets/ui elements to use the stylesets.
- Add configuration manual for the styleset
This command uses the Postpone folder from the account config to save
messages to. Messages are saved as though they were sent so have a valid
'to' recipient address and should be able to be read back in for later
editing.
Due to headers being essentially free text, we constantly run into issues
with parts of the body being interpreted as headers.
Remove the ability to overwrite headers to avoid that, while keeping the ability
to specify headers in the template files.
Fixes#383
Very important fix. Remove garbage from reply message headers. Till
now all Original fields were send in reply, which we do not want and could
lead to uncorrect email message.
This patch parses the processed template for headers and populates
matching header editors.
Those are then stripped from the template body before prepending the template
and remaining header fields to the composer content.
The main motivation for this is keeping receiver, sender and subject
lines in the template file and generating the message subject from the
date.
Parse the processed template for headers and populates matching header
editors accordingly.
Those are then stripped from the template body before prepending it
and remaining header fields to the composer content.
The motivation for this is keeping receiver, sender and subject
lines in the template file and generating the message subject with the
date functions.
+ Changes NewComposer to return error.
+ Add lib to handle templates using "text/template".
+ Add -T option to following commands
- compose.
- reply
- forward
+ Quoted replies using templates.
+ Forwards as body using templates
+ Default templates are installed similar to filters.
+ Templates Config in aerc.conf.
- Required templates are parsed while loading config.
+ Add aerc-templates.7 manual for using template data.
This adds the ability for per-account signatures in the accounts.conf
config file. The signature is added to emails in the editor at the
bottom of the email. This includes when forwarding, replying to, and
composing emails.
There are two config options: signature-file and signature-cmd. The
former allows a signature to be read from a file and the latter allows
an arbitrary command to be executed to return the signature.
The config options have been documented in aerc-config
This adds the Mouseable interface. When this is implemented for a
component that item can accept and process mouseevents.
At the top level when a mouse event is received it is passed to the
grid's handler and then it trickles down until it reaches a component
that can actually handle it, such as the tablist, dirlist or msglist.
A mouse event is passed so that components can handle other things such
as scrolling with the mousewheel. The components themselves then perform
the necessary actions.
Clicking emails in the messagelist opens them in a new tab.
Textinputs can be clicked to position the cursor inside them.
Mouseevents are not forwarded to the terminal at the moment.
Elements which do not handle mouse events are not required to implement
the Mouseable interface.
Before, the text/plain part of the multipart MIME message was not being
correctly terminated with its boundary. The multipart writer writes the
terminator when its Close is called, but since the call to Close() was
deferred, it was not being called until after the attachments were being
written resulting in the boundary not being included at all.
Add a command for removing attachments from a composed message. Syntax
is :detach [path], with path being an optional argument specifying the
path of one existing attachment. If no path is specified, the first
attachment is removed.
Adding an attachment, switching to a different tab, and switching back
to the review message caused the "filled space" in the review message to
disappear, since there was one too many rows in the layout.
Aerc will keep track of the previous 1000 commands, which the user can
cycle through using the arrow keys while in the ex-line. Pressing up
will move backwards in history while pressing down will move forward.
Allow users to add attachments to emails in the Compose view. Syntax is
:attach <path>, where path is a valid file. Attachments will show up in
the pre-send review screen.
Because editors like vim use backupfiles and rename them to the original
name, the file handle used can point to the wrong file. Reopening the
file should fix this.