aerc/config/aerc.conf.in
Jeffas 06af5391a3 Add MouseEnabled config setting
This patch adds the ability to control whether aerc captures mouseevents
or not. By default it will be set to not capture events.
2019-07-17 16:00:44 -04:00

85 lines
2.2 KiB
Text

#
# aerc main configuration
[ui]
#
# Describes the format for each row in a mailbox view. This field is compatible
# with mutt's printf-like syntax.
#
# Default:
index-format=%D %-17.17n %s
#
# See time.Time#Format at https://godoc.org/time#Time.Format
#
# Default: 2006-01-02 03:04 PM (ISO 8601 + 12 hour time)
timestamp-format=2006-01-02 03:04 PM
#
# Width of the sidebar, including the border.
#
# Default: 20
sidebar-width=20
#
# Message to display when viewing an empty folder.
#
# Default: (no messages)
empty-message=(no messages)
# Message to display when no folders exists or are all filtered
#
# Default: (no folders)
empty-dirlist=(no folders)
# Enable mouse events in the ui, e.g. clicking and scrolling with the mousewheel
#
# Default: false
mouse-enabled=false
[viewer]
#
# Specifies the pager to use when displaying emails. Note that some filters
# may add ANSI codes to add color to rendered emails, so you may want to use a
# pager which supports ANSI codes.
#
# Default: less -R
pager=less -R
#
# If an email offers several versions (multipart), you can configure which
# mimetype to prefer. For example, this can be used to prefer plaintext over
# html emails.
#
# Default: text/plain,text/html
alternatives=text/plain,text/html
#
# Default setting to determine whether to show full headers or only parsed
# ones in message viewer.
#
# Default: false
show-headers=false
[compose]
#
# Specifies the command to run the editor with. It will be shown in an embedded
# terminal, though it may also launch a graphical window if the environment
# supports it. Defaults to $EDITOR, or vi.
editor=
[filters]
#
# Filters allow you to pipe an email body through a shell command to render
# certain emails differently, e.g. highlighting them with ANSI escape codes.
#
# The first filter which matches the email's mimetype will be used, so order
# them from most to least specific.
#
# You can also match on non-mimetypes, by prefixing with the header to match
# against (non-case-sensitive) and a comma, e.g. subject,text will match a
# subject which contains "text". Use header,~regex to match against a regex.
subject,~^\[PATCH=awk -f @SHAREDIR@/filters/hldiff
#text/html=@SHAREDIR@/filters/html
text/*=awk -f @SHAREDIR@/filters/plaintext
#image/*=catimg -w $(tput cols) -