Before, lower_only was not being correctly set and was only considering
whether the string ended with a lowercase sequence. Refactored this with
some more explicit functions as the logic is a little confusing.
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.
Make the msglist aware of whether we are still initializing or not.
We never stopped spinning the msglist if we didn't get any Directories back
from types.ListDirectories.
With this change, we can set the init state from the account and display
the spinner only if we don't know whether we have directories or not and else
the "no messages" string from the config.
Add a "new-message-bell" option to the UI section of aerc.conf. A new
hook into the message store allows the msglist widget to detect new
messages being added to the displayed list. When new messages are
delivered, and the new-message-bell option is enabled (as it is by
default), the terminal will beep.
When filter is active we want to use store.results instead of
store.uids, since we are dealing with a subset of the uids. Otherwise
any methods involving len will have undefined behavior.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Kuehler <keur@ocf.berkeley.edu>
Currently we /dev/null stdout, if it is a tty.
The checkConfigPerms function, as well as the error print were incorrectly
writing to stdout and therefore weren't visible to most users.
This allows selection of a tab using its index. It attempts to parse the
given argument as a number, if it fails then it uses it as a name.
Also supports relative indexes using prefixed + or -.
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.
Tabstrip didn't take into account the width of the context. Now, it just
shows as many tabs as can fit and truncates the last one if necessary.
In future it probably would be best to ensure that the selected tab is
rendered on the screen.
This adds tab completion to textinput components. They can be configured
with a completion function. This function is called when the user
presses <tab>. The first completion is initially shown to the user
inserted into the text. Repeated presses of <tab> or <backtab> cycle
through the completions list. The completions list is invalidated when
any other non-tab-like key is pressed.
Also changed is some logic for current completion generation so that
all available commands are returned when <tab> is pressed with no
current text and similarly for arguments of commands.
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.
This map represents a mapping from directory names to their associated
messagestores anyway so they should be under dirstore. This simply moves
them there and adds some methods required to interact with them.
This patch sets up the trigger config section of aerc.conf.
Each trigger has its own function which is called from the place where
it is triggered. Currently only the new-email trigger is implemented.
The triggers make use of format strings. For instance, in the new-email
trigger this allows the user to select the trigger command and also the
information extracted from the command and placed into their command.
To actually execute the trigger commands the keypresses are simulated.
Further triggers can be implemented in the future.
Formatting of the command is moved to a new package.
Executing :close on a terminal would panic due to it already having been
removed.
This is also related to the fact that removing a tab doesn't check for
whether it actually found a tab to remove or not.
The grid was not checking there was enough space for the cells so would
just attempt to create subcontexts that don't actually fit.
This attempts to use the remaining space and then if there is no space
then it just skips drawing this cell.
It is useful when somebody has different Go versions across one system
and first go in $PATH points to version older than 1.12 (common in
stable distributions).
Signed-off-by: Kacper Kołodziej <kacper@kolodziej.it>
This command allows the user to change tab by giving the tab name. This
can be tab completed too. The previous tab is stored in the tabs module
so that when a new tab is created it is still possible to go to the
previous one.
Normal invocation is :ct folder
Previous tab is :ct -