table of contents
MAILPLATE(1) | MAILPLATE(1) |
NAME¶
mailplate - reformat mail drafts according to templatesSYNOPSIS¶
mailplate
[[ --new | -n] |
[--editor | -e]] [ --keep-unknown | -k]
[ --verbose | -v] [--debug | -d]
template-name message-file
mailplate
[ --keep-unknown | -k] [--verbose | -v]
[--debug | -d] template-name
< message-data
mailplate
[[ --auto | -a] |
[--menu | -m]] [[ --new | -n]
| [ --editor | -e]] [--keep-unknown |
-k] [ --verbose | -v] [--debug | -d]
message-file
mailplate
[[ --auto | -a] |
[--menu | -m]] [ --keep-unknown | -k]
[--verbose | -v] [--debug | -d]
< message data
mailplate
[ --help | -h]
mailplate
[ --version | -V]
DESCRIPTION¶
mailplate is a programme that reformats mail drafts according to a given template. The template may be specified on the command line, but mailplate can also use control information from the template files to automatically select an appropriate template ( --auto). A selection menu feature is planned ( --menu). Applying a template means obtainined select data from an existing mail message (unless --new is specified) and to fill it into appropriate slots in the template. Messages are processed in three parts: headers, body, and signature. When --new is given, an empty instantiation of the template is written to stdout. At the moment, --new cannot be combined with --editor. The template can define two types of headers: mandatory and preservatory. Mandatory headers take precedence over headers in the existing message and thus overwrite them. Preservatory headers instruct mailplate to port their data from the existing mail message. Headers in the existing message but not defined in the template are dropped, unless --keep-unknown is given. Body and signature are separated by ´-- ´. If this sentinel is not found, no signature is extracted. Templates can be interpolated and data filled into slots. Helper slots are filled with the output of helper commands (which must be defined in the configuration), environment variable slots are just that, and mail variable slots can be filled with data obtained by running regexps or commands over the message. This script can be run in multiple ways:•As a filter, it applies a template to
data from stdin and writes the result to stdout.
•When --editor is passed, the
script spawns sensible-editor on the result. It may thus be used as the
editor for your mail user agent.
•Given a file, it modifies the file,
unless it cannot write to the file, in which case it writes to
stdout.
OPTIONS¶
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`--´): --auto, -aTurn on template auto-discovery.
--menu, -m
Choose from a list of templates (not yet
implemented)
--new, -n
Create a new message.
--editor, -e
Spawn editor once template is applied.
--keep-unknown, -k
Preserve mail headers not specified in
template.
--verbose, -v
Write informational messages to
stderr.
--debug, -d
Start a debugger after initialisation.
--help, -h
Show summary of options.
--version, -V
Show version of program.
MUTT INTEGRATION¶
I use mailplate as my $editor for mutt, with the following setting in my ~/.mutt/muttrc:set editor="~/.bin/mail/mailplate --edit --auto --keep-unknown"
macro compose e ´:set my_editor="$editor"<enter>:set editor=sensible-editor<enter><edit-headers>:set editor="$my_editor"<enter>´ "invoke normal editor to edit message" macro index,pager e ´:set my_editor="$editor"<enter>:set editor=sensible-editor<enter><edit>:set editor="$my_editor"<enter>´ "invoke normal editor to edit message"
VIM INTEGRATION¶
I am often editing a message with vim and find that I need to use a different identity. For this purpose, I have the following keybindings in my ~/.vim/ftplugin/mail.vim:nmap <buffer> <F1> :w<CR>:%!mailplate --keep-unknown --auto<CR> nmap <buffer> <C-P><F1> :w<CR>:%!mailplate --keep-unknown private<CR> nmap <buffer> <C-P><F2> :w<CR>:%!mailplate --keep-unknown debian<CR>
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was written by martin f. krafft <madduck@madduck.net> with help from Carl Fürstenberg.COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright © 2007 martin f. krafftSeptember 30, 2007 |