from notmuch. It also includes a vim plugin.
You can perform tab-completion using any of these programs.
-Just add the following to your [[notmuch init file|#notmuch_init_file]]:
+Just add the following to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file):
(require 'notmuch-address)
(setq notmuch-address-command "/path/to/address_fetching_program")
akonadimailsearch "$@" 2>/dev/null
As described above, you can now add the following settings to your
-[[notmuch init file|#notmuch_init_file]]:
+[notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file):
(require 'notmuch-address)
(setq notmuch-address-command "~/bin/akonadimailsearch.sh")
## Resending (or bouncing) messages
-Add the following to your [[notmuch init file|#notmuch_init_file]] to be able
+Add the following to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file) to be able
to resend the current message in show mode.
(define-key notmuch-show-mode-map "b"
## `notmuch-hello` refresh status message
-Add the following to your [[notmuch init file|#notmuch_init_file]] to get a
+Add the following to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file) to get a
status message about the change in the number of messages in the mail store
when refreshing the `notmuch-hello` buffer.
Mailman mailing list software rewrites and rewraps long message subjects in
a way that causes TABs to appear in the middle of the subject and header
-lines. Add this to your [[notmuch init file|#notmuch_init_file]] to replace
+lines. Add this to your [notmuch init file](#notmuch_init_file) to replace
tabs with spaces in subject lines:
(defun notmuch-show-subject-tabs-to-spaces ()