mirror of https://github.com/djcb/mu.git
b60cfc7df2
Restore readline support for `mu server' (but _only_ when readline is found and when in tty mode) |
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contrib | ||
guile | ||
lib | ||
m4 | ||
man | ||
mu | ||
mu4e | ||
toys | ||
www | ||
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AUTHORS | ||
COPYING | ||
ChangeLog | ||
HACKING | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
NEWS.org | ||
README | ||
TODO | ||
autogen.sh | ||
c.cfg | ||
configure.ac | ||
gtest.mk |
README
Welcome to mu & mu4e! *Note*: you are looking at the *development* branch, which is where new code is being developed and tested, and which may occasionally break. Distribution and non-adventurous users are instead recommended to use the [1.4.x Release Branch](https://github.com/djcb/mu/tree/release/1.4.x) or to pick up one of the [1.4.x releases](https://github.com/djcb/mu/releases). Given the enormous amounts of e-mail many people gather and the importance of e-mail message in our work-flows, it's essential to quickly deal with all that mail - in particular, to instantly find that one important e-mail you need right now, and quickly file away message for later use. `mu` is a tool for dealing with e-mail messages stored in the Maildir-format. `mu`'s purpose in life is to help you to quickly find the messages you need; in addition, it allows you to view messages, extract attachments, create new maildirs, and so on. See the [mu cheatsheet] for some examples. =mu= is fully documented. After indexing your messages into a [Xapian](http://www.xapian.org)-database, you can search them using a custom query language. You can use various message fields or words in the body text to find the right messages. Built on top of `mu` are some extensions (included in this package): * mu4e: a full-featured e-mail client that runs inside emacs * mu-guile: bindings for the Guile/Scheme programming language (version 2.2 and later) `mu` is written in C and C++; `mu4e` is written in elisp, and `mu-guile` in a mix of C and Scheme. Note, `mu` is available in Linux distributions (e.g. Debian/Ubuntu and Fedora) under the name `maildir-utils`; apparently because they don't like short names.