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Re: Comments about Emacs mail
From: |
despen |
Subject: |
Re: Comments about Emacs mail |
Date: |
Wed, 28 Mar 2012 19:14:44 -0000 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/23.2 (gnu/linux) |
Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes:
>> My comment is that GNUS and MH-E seem to have too little code in
>> common. It would be really nice if they shared message composition.
>
> Hmm... I don't use MH-E but I had the impression that it switched to
> using Gnus's MIME composition code several years ago.
I thought so too, but something's different.
Maybe I'm missing what the boundary is, but
I'm pretty sure I have different key bindings to do
attachments.
Just checked. With GNUS I'm in Message/MML mode.
With MH-E I'm in MH-Letter mode.
>> Lastly, most workplaces have gone to 100% Exchange with it's
>> obnoxious "top posting" style. It took me a while, but
>> I managed to create a binding for MH-E that replies in
>> Outlook style. (With the ---original message--- junk.)
>> Seems to me that's become a required email feature. All the
>> emacs packages should support both reply styles, but as far
>> as I can tell, none of them do. (Except the one I hacked up.)
>
> I haven't bumped into any circumstance where the top-posting is
> a requirement in email we send (rather than only an annoyance in email
> I receive). I've had a few people show surprise at the use of "inline"
> replies (because they had only been exposed to top-posting or to
> snail-mail correspondance), but not annoyance.
At work I'm often reading and replying to threads with dozens of
top posted replies stacked up. If I quoted the whole thing
and replied inline they'd rightfully throw me out a window.
It's crazy, I know, but that's the way it is.
--
Dan Espen
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