[OS X TeX] [OT] Mail & Top Posting
Bruno Voisin
bvoisin at mac.com
Fri May 27 12:10:32 EDT 2005
Le 27 mai 05 à 15:57, Herbert Schulz a écrit :
> One thing I don't like is that Mail encourages top posting in
> replies since the cursor is initially at the top of the page. I've
> got my Signature at the bottom of the page, where I want it, but
> I'd like the cursor to start just below the quoted text. Is there a
> way for me to have Mail do that?
I thought there was an option in Mail to control that (top-posting or
bottom-posting), but I can't find it any longer now.
Another solution is Thunderbird <http://www.mozilla.org/products/
thunderbird/>, with the advantage of getting multi-platform but the
disadvantage of losing access to some OS X niceties, like SpotLight
for email messages. Thunderbird has an item for choosing top-posting
or bottom-posting, in the pref "Composition and Addressing" for each
account.
One more thing about Mail in Tiger: it uses a custom format for
mailboxes, no longer the Unix format which was the norm up to and
including Panther. Namely, you no longer have a single huge plain
text "mbox" file inside a .mbox bundle, but a multitude of .emlx
files, one per message. Which means, once your mailboxes will have
been converted by Mail for use in Tiger, that you will lose the
ability to migrate them afterwards to another mailer should you
decide a switch. The mbox file at the time of the conversion will be
kept, but none of the messages received afterwards will be added to it.
> P.S. In all previous reincarnations of OS X I was able to get away
> with a nice stable system by simply doing an Update. With Tiger I
> ended up doing an Archive & Install because of the horrible
> instability I was seeing. Spending most of a day figuring out what
> I had to carry over from the Previous System folder was a pain but
> things where better although one more thing really helped out (and
> Spotlight helped me find the information which I forgot I had!).
> Delete everything in your ~/Library/Preferences/ByHost/ directory.
> Anything that is needed will be recreated. I had to reset a few
> Preferences, e.g., my Screen Saver, but things have been much
> better since I did that.
After having done several Archive & Install over the years (for
Jaguar, Panther and Tiger), I now expect 2 to 3 days for the whole
process: downloading all the software (or finding the CDs on my
shelves) that installs through Apple or custom installers; backup
texmf.local; repair disk/permissions then install OS X and Xcode then
run System Update; reinstall all installer-based software, including
TeX, XeTeX and additions to texmf.local; browse through Previous
Systems to ensure nothing has been forgotten; burn installers on CD
or DVD in case uninstall scripts are required afterwards.
For example, Windows Media Player, iWork, Adobe Reader, cocoAspell,
NeoOffice, ManOpen, etc., all install components inside the system
directories. For them I consider safer, though time-consuming, to
rerun the installer scripts or software rather than move back the
components from /Previous Systems/Previous System1/Library/Internet
Plug-Ins/ etc., in case I forget something.
> There are a few other gripes, e.g., the Finder Find is crippled
> since it is Spotlight based and won't look into ``hidden'' folders
> like /bin/. I'm back to using Locator, which uses the locate
> database (updated automatically by Macaroni every week), to do
> those kinds of searches.
It's not absolutely necessary to do this:
- Open a Finder window, launch a search and press the Other... "key"
in the "bookmark bar" at the top of the window. This will create a
panel in which you can add permanently, and then check, directories
to be searched.
- Open another window, use Go To Folder (Cmd-Shift-G) to make appear
a hidden directory such as /usr.
- Drag this directory to the panel, where it will be added permanently.
- Back at the top of the window, press the + button then click on the
item in the first column and choose Other... in the menu that
appears. Then, in the new list that appears, locate the line starting
with Visibility and select it.
You're done. I find this extremely inconvenient, and I do hope that,
at some point, a pref will be added to go back to good ole' Panther
Find window.
There is also, I think, another solution but that seems to be
discouraged by Apple on Tiger: make all files and directories
visible, including those with name starting by a dot or the /usr etc.
directories. There are two ways to do this:
- From the command line, using the "defaults" command. In Terminal, type
defaults write com.apple.finder AppleShowAllFiles YES
See <http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Porting/Conceptual/
PortingUnix/additionalfeatures/chapter_10_section_7.html>.
- Assuming you've installed Xcode, double-click on ~/Library/
Preferences/com.apple.finder.plist. This will open the file in
Property List editor. Click on the Root triangle at the top left of
the window, press the button "New Child", then enter
AppleShowAllFiles, then Boolean, then Yes. I found this this morning
in "OS X in a Nutshell" (extremely useful book, halfway between hard-
core Mac OS and GUI on one hand, and hard-core Unix and CLI on the
other hand), I can't wait for the Tiger version.
After either way, when you log out then on, or simply relaunch the
Finder, you'll see all normally invisible files and folders appear
magically. However, as some have remarked on the OS X forums <http://
discussions.info.apple.com/webx?13 at 412.y0b1acwBYhi.6@.68ade492/1>,
all the icons, for either visible or invisible files, are dimmed
(though effective). It's open to interpretation whether that's a bug
or an intended behaviour, to discourage the user from activating the
option (knowing that trashing some invisible directories can render
the system completely unusable and irrecoverable, forcing a new
install).
Bruno--------------------- Info ---------------------
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