mutt-wizard

fork of Luke Smiths mutt-wizard
git clone git://git.jakekoroman.com/mutt-wizard
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commit 08e9ac41d6bf29340032a465b50abd96f7c7885a
parent ff2a8882127f46f811dd73d2ef08bd99df6438f8
Author: Luke Smith <luke@lukesmith.xyz>
Date:   Thu, 11 Oct 2018 14:49:15 -0400

old view_attachment removed

Diffstat:
Detc/view_attachment.sh | 127-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 127 deletions(-)

diff --git a/etc/view_attachment.sh b/etc/view_attachment.sh @@ -1,127 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/bash -# -# Author: Eric Gebhart -# -# Purpose: To be called by mutt as indicated by .mailcap to handle mail attachments. -# -# Function: Copy the given file to a temporary directory so mutt -# Won't delete it before it is read by the application. -# -# Along the way, discern the file type or use the type -# That is given. -# -# Finally use 'open' or 'open -a' if the third argument is -# given. -# -# -# Arguments: -# -# $1 is the file -# $2 is the type - for those times when file magic isn't enough. -# I frequently get html mail that has no extension -# and file can't figure out what it is. -# -# Set to '-' if you don't want the type to be discerned. -# Many applications can sniff out the type on their own. -# And they do a better job of it too. -# -# Open Office and MS Office for example. -# -# $3 is open with. as in open -a 'open with this .app' foo.xls -# -# Examples: These are typical .mailcap entries which use this program. -# -# Image/JPEG; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s -# Image/PNG; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s -# Image/GIF; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s -# -# Application/PDF; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s -# -# #This HTML example passes the type because file doesn't always work and -# #there aren't always extensions. -# -# text/html; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s html -# -# # If your Start OpenOffice.org.app is spelled with a space like this one, <-- -# # then you'll need to precede the space with a \ . I found that too painful -# # and renamed it with an _. -# -# Application/vnd.ms-excel; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s "-" '/Applications/OpenOffice.org1.1.2/Start_OpenOffice.org.app' -# Application/msword; /Users/vdanen/.mutt/view_attachment %s "-" '/Applications/OpenOffice.org1.1.2/Start_OpenOffice.org.app' -# -# -# Debugging: If you have problems set debug to 'yes'. That will cause a debug file -# be written to /tmp/mutt_attach/debug so you can see what is going on. -# -# See Also: The man pages for open, file, basename -# - -# the tmp directory to use. -tmpdir="$HOME/.tmp/mutt_attach" - -# the name of the debug file if debugging is turned on. -debug_file=$tmpdir/debug - -# debug. yes or no. -#debug="no" -debug="yes" - -type=$2 -open_with=$3 - -# make sure the tmpdir exists. -mkdir -p $tmpdir - -# clean it out. Remove this if you want the directory -# to accumulate attachment files. -rm -f $tmpdir/* - -# Mutt puts everything in /tmp by default. -# This gets the basic filename from the full pathname. -filename=`basename $1` - -# get rid of the extenson and save the name for later. -file=`echo $filename | cut -d"." -f1` - -if [ $debug = "yes" ]; then - echo "1:" $1 " 2:" $2 " 3:" $3 > $debug_file - echo "Filename:"$filename >> $debug_file - echo "File:"$file >> $debug_file - echo "===========================" >> $debug_file -fi - -# if the type is empty then try to figure it out. -if [ -z $type ]; then - file $1 - type=`file -bi $1 | cut -d"/" -f2` -fi - -# if the type is '-' then we don't want to mess with type. -# Otherwise we are rebuilding the name. Either from the -# type that was passed in or from the type we discerned. -if [ $type = "-" ]; then - newfile=$filename -else - newfile=$file.$type -fi - -newfile=$tmpdir/$newfile - -# Copy the file to our new spot so mutt can't delete it -# before the app has a chance to view it. -cp $1 $newfile - -if [ $debug = "yes" ]; then - echo "File:" $file "TYPE:" $type >> $debug_file - echo "Newfile:" $newfile >> $debug_file - echo "Open With:" $open_with >> $debug_file -fi - -# If there's no 'open with' then we can let preview do it's thing. -# Otherwise we've been told what to use. So do an open -a. - -if [ -z $open_with ]; then - open $newfile -else - open -a "$open_with" $newfile -fi