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muttrc(5)			 User Manuals			     muttrc(5)

NAME
       muttrc -	Configuration file for the Mutt	Mail User Agent

DESCRIPTION
       A  mutt	configuration  file  consists of a series of "commands".  Each
       line of the file	may contain one	or more	commands.  When	multiple  com-
       mands are used, they must be separated by a semicolon (";").

       The  hash  mark,	or pound sign ("#"), is	used as	a "comment" character.
       You can use it to annotate your initialization file. All	text after the
       comment character to the	end of the line	is ignored.

       Single quotes ("'") and double  quotes  (""")  can  be  used  to	 quote
       strings	which contain spaces or	other special characters.  The differ-
       ence between the	two types of quotes is similar to that of many popular
       shell programs, namely that a single quote is used to specify a literal
       string (one that	is not interpreted for shell variables or quoting with
       a backslash [see	next  paragraph]),  while  double  quotes  indicate  a
       string which should be evaluated.  For example, backticks are evaluated
       inside of double	quotes,	but not	single quotes.

       \  quotes  the  next character, just as in shells such as bash and zsh.
       For example, if want to put quotes (""")	inside of a  string,  you  can
       use  "\"	 to force the next character to	be a literal instead of	inter-
       preted character.

       "\\" means to insert a literal "\" into the line.  "\n" and  "\r"  have
       their usual C meanings of linefeed and carriage-return, respectively.

       A  "\" at the end of a line can be used to split	commands over multiple
       lines, provided that the	split points don't appear  in  the  middle  of
       command names.

       It  is  also  possible to substitute the	output of a Unix command in an
       initialization file.  This is accomplished by enclosing the command  in
       backticks (`command`).

       UNIX  environment  variables can	be accessed like the way it is done in
       shells like sh and bash:	Prepend	the name of the	variable by  a	dollar
       ("$") sign.

COMMANDS
       alias [-group name [...]] key address [,	address	[ ... ]]
       unalias [ *  | key ]

	      alias defines an alias key for the given addresses. Each address
	      will be resolved into either an email address (user@example.com)
	      or a named email address (User Name <user@example.com>). The ad-
	      dress  may  be  specified	 in  either  format,  or in the	format
	      "user@example.com	(User Name)".  unalias removes the alias  cor-
	      responding  to  the given	key or all aliases when	"*" is used as
	      an argument. The optional	-group argument	to  alias  causes  the
	      aliased address(es) to be	added to the named group.

       group [-group name] [-rx	EXPR [ ... ]] [-addr address [ ... ]]
       ungroup [-group name ] [	* | [[-rx EXPR [ ... ]]	[-addr address [ ... ]]]

	      group  is	 used  to directly add either addresses	or regular ex-
	      pressions	to the specified group or groups. The different	 cate-
	      gories  of  arguments  to	the group command can be in any	order.
	      The flags	-rx and	-addr specify what the following strings (that
	      cannot begin with	a hyphen) should be interpreted	as:  either  a
	      regular  expression  or an email address,	respectively.  ungroup
	      is used to remove	addresses  or  regular	expressions  from  the
	      specified	 group	or  groups. The	syntax is similar to the group
	      command, however the special character * can be used to empty  a
	      group of all of its contents.

	      These  address  groups  can  also	 be  created implicitly	by the
	      alias, lists, subscribe and alternates  commands	by  specifying
	      the optional -group option.

	      Once  defined,  these  address groups can	be used	in patterns to
	      search for and limit the display to messages matching a group.

       alternates [-group name]	regexp [ regexp	[ ... ]]
       unalternates [ *	 | regexp [ regexp [ ... ]] ]

	      alternates is used to  inform  mutt  about  alternate  addresses
	      where you	receive	mail; you can use regular expressions to spec-
	      ify  alternate  addresses.   This	affects	mutt's idea about mes-
	      sages from you, and messages addressed to	you.  unalternates re-
	      moves a regular expression from the list	of  known  alternates.
	      The -group flag causes all of the	subsequent regular expressions
	      to be added to the named group.

       alternative_order type[/subtype]	[ ... ]
       unalternative_order [ *	| type/subtype]	[...]

	      alternative_order	 command  permits  you	to  define an order of
	      preference which is used by mutt to determine which  part	 of  a
	      multipart/alternative body to display.  A	subtype	of "*" matches
	      any subtype, as does an empty subtype.   unalternative_order re-
	      moves  entries  from the ordered list or deletes the entire list
	      when "*" is used as an argument.

       attachments [ + | - ]disposition	mime-type
       unattachments [ + | - ]disposition mime-type
       attachments ?
       unattachments *

	      attachments specifies what kinds of  attachments	are  used  for
	      Mutt's attachment	counting and searching support.

	      disposition  is  the attachment's	Content-Disposition type - ei-
	      ther inline or attachment. You can abbreviate this to I or A.

	      The first	part of	a message or multipart group,  if  inline,  is
	      counted  separately  than	 other inline parts. Specify root or R
	      for disposition to count these as	 attachments.  If  this	 first
	      part  is	of type	multipart/alternative, note that its top-level
	      inline  parts  are  also	counted	 via  root   disposition   (if
	      $count_alternatives is set).

	      disposition  is  prefixed	by either a + symbol or	a - symbol. If
	      it's a +,	you're saying that you want to allow this  disposition
	      and  MIME	 type to qualify. If it's a -, you're saying that this
	      disposition and MIME type	is an exception	to previous + rules.

	      mime-type	is the MIME type of the	attachment you want  the  com-
	      mand to affect. A	MIME type is always of the format major/minor,
	      where  major  describes  the  broad  category of document	you're
	      looking at, and minor describes the specific  type  within  that
	      category.	 The  major part of mime-type must be literal text (or
	      the special token	*), but	the minor part may be  a  regular  ex-
	      pression.	(Therefore, */.* matches any MIME type.)

	      The  MIME	types you give to the attachments directive are	a kind
	      of pattern. When you use the attachments directive, the patterns
	      you specify are added to a list. When you	use unattachments, the
	      pattern is removed from the list.	The patterns are not  expanded
	      and  matched  to specific	MIME types at this time	- they're just
	      text in a	list. They're only matched when	actually evaluating  a
	      message.

       auto_view type[/subtype]	[ ... ]
       unauto_view type[/subtype] [ ...	]

	      This  commands permits you to specify that mutt should automati-
	      cally convert the	given MIME types to text/plain when displaying
	      messages.	 For this to work, there must be  a  mailcap(5)	 entry
	      for the given MIME type with the copiousoutput flag set.	A sub-
	      type of "*" matches any subtype, as does an empty	subtype.

       mime_lookup type[/subtype] [ ...	]
       unmime_lookup type[/subtype] [ ... ]

	      This command permits you to define a list	of "data" MIME content
	      types  for which mutt will try to	determine the actual file type
	      from the file name, and not use a	mailcap(5) entry given for the
	      original MIME type.  For instance,  you  may  add	 the  applica-
	      tion/octet-stream	MIME type to this list.

       bind map1,map2,... key function
	      This  command  binds  the	given key for the given	map or maps to
	      the given	function. Multiple maps	may be specified by separating
	      them with	commas (no whitespace is allowed).

	      Valid maps are: generic, alias, attach, browser, editor,	index,
	      compose, pager, pgp, postpone, mix.

	      For  more	 information on	keys and functions, please consult the
	      Mutt Manual. Note	that the function  name	 is  to	 be  specified
	      without angle brackets.

       account-hook [!]regexp command
	      This hook	is executed whenever you access	a remote mailbox. Use-
	      ful  to  adjust  configuration settings to different IMAP	or POP
	      servers.

       charset-hook alias charset
	      This command defines an alias for	a character set.  This is use-
	      ful to properly display messages which are tagged	with a charac-
	      ter set name not known to	mutt.

       iconv-hook charset local-charset
	      This command defines a system-specific name for a	character set.
	      This is useful when your system's	iconv(3)  implementation  does
	      not  understand  MIME  character set names (such as iso-8859-1),
	      but instead insists on being  fed	 with  implementation-specific
	      character	 set  names  (such as 8859-1).	In this	specific case,
	      you'd put	this into your configuration file:

	      iconv-hook iso-8859-1 8859-1

       message-hook [!]pattern command
	      Before mutt displays (or formats for replying or	forwarding)  a
	      message which matches the	given pattern (or, when	it is preceded
	      by  an  exclamation mark,	does not match the pattern), the given
	      command is executed.  When multiple  message-hooks  match,  they
	      are  executed  in	 the order in which they occur in the configu-
	      ration file.

       folder-hook [!]regexp command
	      When  mutt enters	a folder which matches regexp (or, when	regexp
	      is preceded by an	exclamation mark, does not match regexp),  the
	      given command is executed.

	      When  several  folder-hooks  match a given mail folder, they are
	      executed in the order given in the configuration file.

       macro map key sequence [	description ]
	      This command binds the given sequence of keys to the  given  key
	      in  the given map	or maps.  For valid maps, see bind. To specify
	      multiple maps, put only a	comma between the maps.

       color object [ attribute	... ] foreground background [ regexp ]
       color index [ attribute ... ] foreground	background [ pattern ]
       color compose composeobject [ attribute ... ] foreground	background
       uncolor index pattern [ pattern ... ]

	      If your terminal supports	color, these commands can be  used  to
	      assign  foreground/background  combinations  to certain objects.
	      Valid objects are: attachment, body, bold, error,	header,	hdrde-
	      fault,  index,  indicator,  markers,  message,  normal,  prompt,
	      quoted,  quotedN,	search,	signature, status, tilde, tree,	under-
	      line.  If	the sidebar is enabled the following objects are  also
	      valid:   sidebar_divider,	  sidebar_flagged,  sidebar_highlight,
	      sidebar_indicator, sidebar_new, sidebar_spoolfile.  The body and
	      header objects allow you to restrict the colorization to a regu-
	      lar expression.  The index object	permits	you to select  colored
	      messages by pattern.

	      Valid  composeobjects  include  header,  security_encrypt, secu-
	      rity_sign, security_both,	security_none.

	      Valid colors include: white, black, green, magenta, blue,	 cyan,
	      yellow, red, default, colorN.

	      Valid  attributes	 include:  none, bold, underline, reverse, and
	      standout.

       mono object attribute [ regexp ]
       mono index attribute [ pattern ]

	      For terminals which don't	support	color, you  can	 still	assign
	      attributes to objects.

       [un]ignore pattern [ pattern ...	]
	      The  ignore  command  permits you	to specify header fields which
	      you usually don't	wish to	see.  Any header field whose  tag  be-
	      gins with	an "ignored" pattern will be ignored.

	      The  unignore  command permits you to define exceptions from the
	      above mentioned list of ignored headers.

       lists [-group name] regexp [ regexp ... ]
       unlists regexp [	regexp ... ]
       subscribe [-group name] regexp [	regexp ... ]
       unsubscribe regexp [ regexp ... ]

	      Mutt maintains two lists of mailing  list	 address  patterns,  a
	      list  of	subscribed  mailing lists, and a list of known mailing
	      lists.  All subscribed mailing lists are	known.	 Patterns  use
	      regular expressions.

	      The  lists  command  adds	 a mailing list	address	to the list of
	      known mailing lists.  The	unlists	command	removes	a mailing list
	      from the lists of	known and subscribed mailing lists.  The  sub-
	      scribe  command  adds  a	mailing	list to	the lists of known and
	      subscribed mailing lists.	 The unsubscribe  command  removes  it
	      from  the	list of	subscribed mailing lists. The -group flag adds
	      all of the subsequent regular expressions	to the named group.

       mbox-hook [!]regexp mailbox
	      When mutt	changes	to a mail folder which matches regexp, mailbox
	      will be used as the "mbox" folder, i.e., read messages  will  be
	      moved to that folder when	the mail folder	is left.

	      The first	matching mbox-hook applies.

       mailboxes [[-notify | -nonotify]
		  [-poll | -nopoll]
		  [[-label label] | -nolabel]
		  filename] [ ... ]
       unmailboxes [ * | filename ... ]

	      The mailboxes specifies folders which can	receive	mail and which
	      will be checked for new messages.	 When changing folders,	press-
	      ing space	will cycle through folders with	new mail.  The unmail-
	      boxes  command  is  used	to remove a file name from the list of
	      folders which can	receive	mail.  If "*" is specified as the file
	      name, the	list is	emptied.

       my_hdr string
       unmy_hdr	field

	      Using my_hdr, you	can define headers which will be added to  the
	      messages	you  compose.  unmy_hdr	will remove the	given user-de-
	      fined headers.

       hdr_order header1 header2 [ ... ]
	      With this	command, you can specify an order in which  mutt  will
	      attempt to present headers to you	when viewing messages.

       save-hook [!]pattern filename
	      When  a message matches pattern, the default file	name when sav-
	      ing it will be the given filename.

       fcc-hook	[!]pattern filename
	      When an outgoing message matches pattern,	the default file  name
	      for storing a copy (fcc) will be the given filename.

       fcc-save-hook [!]pattern	filename
	      This command is an abbreviation for identical fcc-hook and save-
	      hook commands.

       send-hook [!]pattern command
	      When  composing a	message	matching pattern, command is executed.
	      When multiple send-hooks match, they are executed	in  the	 order
	      in which they occur in the configuration file.

       send2-hook [!]pattern command
	      Whenever	a message matching pattern is changed (either by edit-
	      ing it or	by using the compose menu), command is executed.  When
	      multiple	send2-hooks  match,  they are executed in the order in
	      which they occur in the configuration file.   Possible  applica-
	      tions  include  setting  the $sendmail variable when a message's
	      from header is changed.

	      send2-hook execution is not triggered by	use  of	 enter-command
	      from the compose menu.

       reply-hook [!]pattern command
	      When  replying  to  a  message matching pattern, command is exe-
	      cuted.  When multiple reply-hooks	match, they  are  executed  in
	      the order	in which they occur in the configuration file, but all
	      reply-hooks  are matched and executed before send-hooks, regard-
	      less of their order in the configuration file.

       crypt-hook regexp key-id
	      The crypt-hook command provides a	method by which	you can	 spec-
	      ify the ID of the	public key to be used when encrypting messages
	      to  a certain recipient.	The meaning of "key ID"	is to be taken
	      broadly: This can	be a different e-mail address, a numerical key
	      ID, or even just an arbitrary search string.  You	may use	multi-
	      ple crypt-hooks with the same regexp; multiple  matching	crypt-
	      hooks result in the use of multiple key-ids for a	recipient.

       index-format-hook name [!]pattern format-string
	      This  command  is	used to	inject format strings dynamically into
	      $index_format based on pattern matching against the current mes-
	      sage.

	      The $index_format	expando	%@name@	specifies  a  placeholder  for
	      the injection. Index-format-hooks	with the same name are matched
	      using  pattern  against the current message. Matching is done in
	      the order	specified in the .muttrc, with the first  match	 being
	      used.  The  hook's  format-string	is then	substituted and	evalu-
	      ated.

       open-hook regexp	"command"
       close-hook regexp "command"
       append-hook regexp "command"

	      These commands provide a way to handle compressed	 folders.  The
	      given  regexp  specifies	which  folders are taken as compressed
	      (e.g.  "\\.gz$").	The commands tell Mutt	how  to	 uncompress  a
	      folder  (open-hook),  compress a folder (close-hook) or append a
	      compressed mail to a compressed folder (append-hook).  The  com-
	      mand  string  is the printf(3) like format string, and it	should
	      accept two parameters: %f, which	is  replaced  with  the	 (com-
	      pressed)	folder name, and %t which is replaced with the name of
	      the temporary folder to which to write.

       push string
       exec function [ ... ]

	      push adds	the named string to the	keyboard buffer.  "exec	 func-
	      tion" is equivalent to "push <function>".

       run MuttLisp

	      The  run	command	evaluates the MuttLisp argument. The output of
	      the MuttLisp is then executed as a Mutt command, as if  it  were
	      typed in the muttrc instead.

       score pattern value
       unscore [ * | pattern ... ]

	      The  score  commands  adds value to a message's score if pattern
	      matches it.  The unscore command removes score entries from  the
	      list.

       set [no|inv|&|?]variable[=value]	[ ... ]
       toggle variable [ ... ]
       unset variable [	... ]
       reset variable [	... ]

	      These  commands  are  used  to  set and manipulate configuration
	      variables.

	      Mutt knows four  basic  types  of	 variables:  boolean,  number,
	      string and quadoption.  Boolean variables	can be set (true), un-
	      set (false), or toggled. Number variables	can be assigned	a pos-
	      itive integer value.

	      String  variables	consist	of any number of printable characters.
	      Strings must be enclosed in quotes if  they  contain  spaces  or
	      tabs.   You  may also use	the "C"	escape sequences \n and	\t for
	      newline and tab, respectively.

	      Quadoption variables are used to control whether or  not	to  be
	      prompted for certain actions, or to specify a default action.  A
	      value  of	 yes will cause	the action to be carried out automati-
	      cally as if you had answered yes to the question.	 Similarly,  a
	      value  of	 no  will cause	the action to be carried out as	if you
	      had answered "no." A value of ask-yes will cause a prompt	with a
	      default answer of	"yes" and ask-no will provide a	default	answer
	      of "no."

	      The reset	command	resets all given variables to the compile time
	      defaults.	 If you	reset the special variable all,	all  variables
	      will reset to their compile time defaults.

       setenv [?]variable [ value ]
       unsetenv	variable

	      These  alter  the	 environment  that Mutt	passes on to its child
	      processes.  You can also query  current  environment  values  by
	      prefixing	a ? character.

       sidebar_whitelist mailbox [ mailbox ...]
       unsidebar_whitelist [ * | mailbox ... ]

	      sidebar_whitelist	 specifies  mailboxes that will	always be dis-
	      played in	the sidebar, even if $sidebar_new_mail_only is set and
	      the mailbox does not contain new mail.

	      unsidebar_whitelist is used to remove a mailbox from the list of
	      whitelisted mailboxes. Use unsidebar_whitelist * to  remove  all
	      mailboxes.

       source filename
	      The given	file will be evaluated as a configuration file.

       spam pattern format
       nospam pattern

	      These commands define spam-detection patterns from external spam
	      filters,	so  that  mutt	can  sort, limit, and search on	``spam
	      tags'' or	``spam attributes'', or	display	them in	the index. See
	      the Mutt manual for details.

       subjectrx pattern replacement
       unsubjectrx [ * | pattern ]

	      subjectrx	specifies a regular expression pattern which,  if  de-
	      tected  in  a message subject, causes the	subject	to be replaced
	      with the replacement value. The replacement is subject  to  sub-
	      stitutions  in  the same way as for the spam command: %L for the
	      text to the left of the match, %R	for text to the	right  of  the
	      match,  and %1 for the first subgroup in the match (etc).	If you
	      simply want to erase the match, set it to	"%L%R".	Any number  of
	      subjectrx	commands may coexist.

	      Note  this  well:	the replacement	value replaces the entire sub-
	      ject, not	just the match!

	      unsubjectrx removes a  given  subjectrx  from  the  substitution
	      list. If * is used as the	pattern, all substitutions will	be re-
	      moved.

       unhook [	*  | hook-type ]
	      This command will	remove all hooks of a given type, or all hooks
	      when  "*"	 is  used as an	argument.  hook-type can be any	of the
	      -hook commands documented	above.

       mailto_allow header-field [ ... ]
       unmailto_allow [	* | header-field ... ]

	      These commands allow the user to	modify	the  list  of  allowed
	      header fields in a mailto: URL that Mutt will include in the the
	      generated	 message.   By	default	the list contains only subject
	      and body,	as specified by	RFC2368.

       echo message
	      Prints message to	the message window. After  printing  the  mes-
	      sage,  echo  will	 pause	for the	number of seconds specified by
	      $sleep_time.

       cd directory
	      Changes the current working directory.

PATTERNS
       In various places with mutt, including some of the above	mentioned hook
       commands, you can specify patterns to match messages.

   Constructing	Patterns
       A simple	pattern	consists of a modifier of the form "~character",  pos-
       sibly  followed	by a parameter against which mutt is supposed to match
       the object specified by this modifier.  For some	characters, the	~  may
       be  replaced  by	 another character to alter the	behavior of the	match.
       These are described in the list of modifiers, below.

       With some of these modifiers, the object	to be matched consists of sev-
       eral e-mail addresses.  In these	cases, the object  is  matched	if  at
       least  one  of  these  e-mail  addresses	matches. You can prepend a hat
       ("^") character to such a pattern to indicate that all  addresses  must
       match in	order to match the object.

       You  can	 construct  complex patterns by	combining simple patterns with
       logical operators.  Logical AND is specified  by	 simply	 concatenating
       two  simple patterns, for instance "~C mutt-dev ~s bug".	 Logical OR is
       specified by inserting a	vertical bar ("|") between two	patterns,  for
       instance	 "~C  mutt-dev | ~s bug".  Additionally, you can negate	a pat-
       tern by prepending a bang ("!") character.  For logical	grouping,  use
       braces ("()"). Example: "!(~t mutt|~c mutt) ~f elkins".

   Simple Patterns
       Mutt understands	the following simple patterns:

       ~A	   all messages
       ~b EXPR	   messages which contain EXPR in the message body.
       =b STRING   If  IMAP is enabled,	like ~b	but searches for STRING	on the
		   server, rather than downloading each	message	and  searching
		   it locally.
       ~B EXPR	   messages which contain EXPR in the whole message.
       =B STRING   If  IMAP is enabled,	like ~B	but searches for STRING	on the
		   server, rather than downloading each	message	and  searching
		   it locally.
       ~c EXPR	   messages carbon-copied to EXPR
       %c GROUP	   messages carbon-copied to any member	of GROUP
       ~C EXPR	   messages either to: or cc: EXPR
       %C GROUP	   messages either to: or cc: to any member of GROUP
       ~d MIN-MAX  messages with "date-sent" in	a Date range
       ~D	   deleted messages
       ~e EXPR	   messages which contain EXPR in the "Sender" field
       %e GROUP	   messages  which  contain  a member of GROUP in the "Sender"
		   field
       ~E	   expired messages
       ~f EXPR	   messages originating	from EXPR
       %f GROUP	   messages originating	from any member	of GROUP
       ~F	   flagged messages
       ~g	   PGP signed messages
       ~G	   PGP encrypted messages
       ~h EXPR	   messages which contain EXPR in the message header
       =h STRING   If IMAP is enabled, like ~h but searches for	STRING on  the
		   server,  rather than	downloading each message and searching
		   it locally.	STRING must be of the form "header: substring"
       ~H EXPR	   messages with spam tags matching EXPR
       ~i EXPR	   messages which match	EXPR in	the "Message-ID" field
       ~k	   messages containing PGP key material
       ~l	   messages addressed to a known mailing list (defined by  ei-
		   ther	subscribe or list)
       ~L EXPR	   messages either originated or received by EXPR
       %L GROUP	   messages  either  originated	 or  received by any member of
		   GROUP
       ~m MIN-MAX  message in the range	MIN to MAX
       ~M EXPR	   messages which contain a mime Content-Type matching EXPR
       ~n MIN-MAX  messages with a score in the	range MIN to MAX
       ~N	   new messages
       ~O	   old messages
       ~p	   messages addressed to you (consults $from, alternates,  and
		   local account/hostname information)
       ~P	   messages  from  you	(consults $from, alternates, and local
		   account/hostname information)
       ~Q	   messages which have been replied to
       ~r MIN-MAX  messages with "date-received" in a Date range
       ~R	   read	messages
       ~s EXPR	   messages having EXPR	in the "Subject" field.
       ~S	   superseded messages
       ~t EXPR	   messages addressed to EXPR
       ~T	   tagged messages
       ~u	   messages addressed to a subscribed mailing list (defined by
		   subscribe commands)
       ~U	   unread messages
       ~v	   message is part of a	collapsed thread.
       ~V	   cryptographically verified messages
       ~x EXPR	   messages which contain EXPR in the "References" or  "In-Re-
		   ply-To" field
       ~X MIN-MAX  messages with MIN - MAX attachments
       ~y EXPR	   messages which contain EXPR in the "X-Label"	field
       ~z MIN-MAX  messages with a size	in the range MIN to MAX
       ~=	   duplicated messages (see $duplicate_threads)
       ~$	   unreferenced	message	(requires threaded view)
       ~(PATTERN)  messages  in	threads	containing messages matching a certain
		   pattern, e.g. all threads  containing  messages  from  you:
		   ~(~P)
       ~<(PATTERN) messages  whose  immediate  parent  matches	PATTERN,  e.g.
		   replies to your messages: ~<(~P)
       ~>(PATTERN) messages having an immediate	child matching	PATTERN,  e.g.
		   messages you	replied	to: ~>(~P)

       In the above, EXPR is a regular expression.

       With  the  ~d,  ~m,  ~n,	~r, ~X,	and ~z modifiers, you can also specify
       ranges in the forms <MAX, >MIN, MIN-, and -MAX.

       With the	~z modifier, the suffixes "K" and "M" are allowed  to  specify
       kilobyte	and megabyte respectively.

       The  ~b,	 ~B, ~h, ~M, and ~X modifiers require reading each message in,
       which can be much slower.

       You can force Mutt to treat EXPR	as a simple string instead of a	 regu-
       lar expression by using = instead of ~ in the pattern name.

   Matching dates
       The ~d and ~r modifiers are used	to match date ranges, which are	inter-
       preted to be given in your local	time zone.

       A  date is of the form DD[/MM[/[cc]YY]],	that is, a two-digit date, op-
       tionally	followed by a two-digit	month, optionally followed by  a  year
       specifications.	Omitted	fields default to the current month and	year.

       Mutt  understands  either  two or four digit year specifications.  When
       given a two-digit year, mutt will interpret values less than 70 as  ly-
       ing  in	the 21st century (i.e.,	"38" means 2038	and not	1938, and "00"
       is interpreted as 2000),	and values greater than	or equal to 70 as  ly-
       ing in the 20th century.

       Note  that  this	 behavior  is Y2K compliant, but that mutt does	have a
       Y2.07K problem.

       Alternatively, you may use YYYYMMDD to specify a	date.

       If a date range consists	of a single date,  the	modifier  in  question
       will  match  that  precise  date.  If the date range consists of	a dash
       ("-"), followed by a date, this range will match	any date before	and up
       to the date given.  Similarly, a	date followed by a  dash  matches  the
       date  given  and	 any  later  point of time.  Two dates,	separated by a
       dash, match any date which lies in the given range of time.

       You can also modify any absolute	date by	giving an error	range.	An er-
       ror range consists of one of the	characters +, -, *, followed by	a pos-
       itive number, followed by one of	the unit characters y,	m,  w,	or  d,
       specifying  a  unit  of years, months, weeks, or	days.  + increases the
       maximum date matched by the given interval of  time,  -	decreases  the
       minimum date matched by the given interval of time, and * increases the
       maximum date and	decreases the minimum date matched by the given	inter-
       val  of time.  It is possible to	give multiple error margins, which cu-
       mulate.	Example: 1/1/2001-1w+2w*3d

       You can also specify offsets relative to	the current date.   An	offset
       is  specified  as one of	the characters <, >, =,	followed by a positive
       number, followed	by one of the unit characters y, m, w, d, H, M,	or  S.
       >  matches  dates which are older than the specified amount of time, an
       offset which begins with	the character <	matches	dates which  are  more
       recent  than  the  specified amount of time, and	an offset which	begins
       with the	character = matches points of time  which  are	precisely  the
       given amount of time ago.

CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
       abort_noattach
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: no

	      When  the	body of	the message matches $abort_noattach_regexp and
	      there are	no attachments,	this quadoption	 controls  whether  to
	      abort sending the	message.

       abort_noattach_regexp
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: "attach"

	      Specifies	 a regular expression to match against the body	of the
	      message, to determine if an attachment was mentioned but mistak-
	      enly forgotten.  If it matches,  $abort_noattach	will  be  con-
	      sulted to	determine if message sending will be aborted.

	      Like  other regular expressions in Mutt, the search is case sen-
	      sitive if	the pattern contains at	least one upper	 case  letter,
	      and case insensitive otherwise.

       abort_nosubject
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      If  set  to yes, when composing messages and no subject is given
	      at the subject prompt, composition will be aborted.  If  set  to
	      no,  composing  messages	with  no  subject given	at the subject
	      prompt will never	be aborted.

       abort_unmodified
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      If set to	yes, composition will automatically abort after	 edit-
	      ing  the	message	 body if no changes are	made to	the file (this
	      check only happens after the first edit of the file).  When  set
	      to no, composition will never be aborted.

       alias_file
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/.muttrc"

	      The  default  file in which to save aliases created by the <cre-
	      ate-alias> function. Entries added to this file are  encoded  in
	      the  character  set specified by $config_charset if it is	set or
	      the current character set	otherwise.

	      Note: Mutt will not automatically	source this file; you must ex-
	      plicitly use the "source"	command	for it to be executed in  case
	      this option points to a dedicated	alias file.

	      The  default  for	this option is the currently used muttrc file,
	      or "~/.muttrc" if	no user	muttrc was found.

       alias_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%4n %2f	%t %-10a   %r"

	      Specifies	the format of the data displayed for the "alias" menu.
	      The following printf(3)-style sequences are available:
	      %a     alias name
	      %f     flags - currently,	a "d" for an alias marked for deletion
	      %n     index number
	      %r     address which alias expands to
	      %t     character which indicates if the alias is tagged for  in-
		     clusion

       allow_8bit
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls	whether	 8-bit data is converted to 7-bit using	either
	      Quoted- Printable	or Base64 encoding when	sending	mail.

       allow_ansi
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls whether ANSI color codes	in messages (and color tags in
	      rich text	messages) are to be interpreted.  Messages  containing
	      these codes are rare, but	if this	option is set, their text will
	      be  colored  accordingly.	Note that this may override your color
	      choices, and even	present	a security problem,  since  a  message
	      could include a line like

	      [-- PGP output follows ...

	      and  give	 it  the same color as your attachment color (see also
	      $crypt_timestamp).

       arrow_cursor
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	an arrow ("->")	will be	used to	indicate  the  current
	      entry  in	menus instead of highlighting the whole	line.  On slow
	      network or modem links this will make  response  faster  because
	      there  is	 less that has to be redrawn on	the screen when	moving
	      to the next or previous entries in the menu.

       ascii_chars
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, Mutt will	use plain  ASCII  characters  when  displaying
	      thread  and attachment trees, instead of the default ACS charac-
	      ters.

       askbcc
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, Mutt will	prompt you for blind-carbon-copy (Bcc) recipi-
	      ents before editing an outgoing message.

       askcc
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, Mutt will	prompt you for carbon-copy (Cc)	recipients be-
	      fore editing the body of an outgoing message.

       assumed_charset
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This variable is a colon-separated list  of  character  encoding
	      schemes  for  messages  without  character  encoding indication.
	      Header field values and message body content  without  character
	      encoding	indication  would  be assumed that they	are written in
	      one of this list.	 By default, all the header fields and message
	      body without  any	 charset  indication  are  assumed  to	be  in
	      "us-ascii".

	      For example, Japanese users might	prefer this:

	      set assumed_charset="iso-2022-jp:euc-jp:shift_jis:utf-8"

	      However, only the	first content is valid for the message body.

       attach_charset
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  variable  is  a colon-separated list of character encoding
	      schemes for text file attachments. Mutt  uses  this  setting  to
	      guess which encoding files being attached	are encoded in to con-
	      vert them	to a proper character set given	in $send_charset.

	      If unset,	the value of $charset will be used instead.  For exam-
	      ple,  the	 following  configuration would	work for Japanese text
	      handling:

	      set attach_charset="iso-2022-jp:euc-jp:shift_jis:utf-8"

	      Note: for	Japanese users,	"iso-2022-*" must be put at  the  head
	      of the value as shown above if included.

       attach_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%u%D%I %t%4n %T%.40d%> [%.7m/%.10M, %.6e%?C?, %C?, %s] "

	      This  variable  describes	 the  format of	the "attachment" menu.
	      The following printf(3)-style sequences are understood:
	      %C     charset
	      %c     requires charset conversion ("n" or "c")
	      %D     deleted flag
	      %d     description (if none, falls back to %F)
	      %e     MIME content-transfer-encoding
	      %F     filename in content-disposition header  (if  none,	 falls
		     back to %f)
	      %f     filename
	      %I     disposition ("I" for inline, "A" for attachment)
	      %m     major MIME	type
	      %M     MIME subtype
	      %n     attachment	number
	      %Q     "Q", if MIME part qualifies for attachment	counting
	      %s     size (see formatstrings-size)
	      %t     tagged flag
	      %T     graphic tree characters
	      %u     unlink (=to delete) flag
	      %X     number  of	 qualifying  MIME  parts  in this part and its
		     children (please see the "attachments" section for	possi-
		     ble speed effects)
	      %>X    right justify the rest of the string and pad with charac-
		     ter "X"
	      %|X    pad to the	end of the line	with character "X"
	      %*X    soft-fill with character "X" as pad

	      For an explanation of "soft-fill", see the  $index_format	 docu-
	      mentation.

       attach_save_charset_convert
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      When  saving  received  text-type	 attachments,  this quadoption
	      prompts to convert the character set if the encoding of the  at-
	      tachment (or $assumed_charset if none is specified) differs from
	      charset.

       attach_save_dir
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      The  default directory to	save attachments from the "attachment"
	      menu.  If	it doesn't exist, Mutt will prompt to create  the  di-
	      rectory before saving.

	      If  the  path  is	 invalid  (e.g.	 not a directory, or cannot be
	      chdir'ed to), Mutt will fall back	to using  the  current	direc-
	      tory.

       attach_sep
	      Type: string
	      Default: "\n"

	      The separator to add between attachments when operating (saving,
	      printing,	piping,	etc) on	a list of tagged attachments.

       attach_split
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  this	variable  is  unset, when operating (saving, printing,
	      piping, etc) on a	list of	tagged attachments, Mutt will concate-
	      nate the attachments and will operate on them as	a  single  at-
	      tachment.	 The $attach_sep separator is added after each attach-
	      ment. When set, Mutt will	operate	on the attachments one by one.

       attribution
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "On %d, %n wrote:"

	      This is the string that will precede a message  which  has  been
	      included	 in   a	  reply.    For	 a  full  listing  of  defined
	      printf(3)-like sequences see the section on $index_format.

       attribution_locale
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      The locale used by strftime(3) to	format dates in	 the  attribu-
	      tion  string.   Legal values are the strings your	system accepts
	      for the locale environment variable $LC_TIME.

	      This variable is to allow	the attribution	date format to be cus-
	      tomized by recipient or folder using hooks.   By	default,  Mutt
	      will  use	 your  locale  environment, so there is	no need	to set
	      this except to override that default.

       auto_subscribe
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	Mutt assumes the presence of a List-Post header	 means
	      the  recipient  is  subscribed  to the list.  Unless the mailing
	      list is in the "unsubscribe" or "unlist" lists, it will be added
	      to the "subscribe" list.	 Parsing  and  checking	 these	things
	      slows  header  reading  down,  so	this option is disabled	by de-
	      fault.

       auto_tag
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	functions in the index menu  which  affect  a  message
	      will be applied to all tagged messages (if there are any).  When
	      unset,  you  must	 first use the <tag-prefix> function (bound to
	      ";" by default) to make the next function	apply  to  all	tagged
	      messages.

       autocrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  enables autocrypt, which provides passive encryption
	      protection with keys exchanged via headers.  See	"autocryptdoc"
	      for more details.	 (Autocrypt only)

       autocrypt_acct_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%4n %-30a %20p %10s"

	      This  variable  describes	 the format of the "autocrypt account"
	      menu.  The following printf(3)-style sequences are understood
	      %a     email address
	      %k     gpg keyid
	      %n     current entry number
	      %p     prefer-encrypt flag
	      %s     status flag (active/inactive)

	      (Autocrypt only)

       autocrypt_dir
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/.mutt/autocrypt"

	      This variable sets where autocrypt files are  stored,  including
	      the  GPG	keyring	 and  sqlite database.	See "autocryptdoc" for
	      more details.  (Autocrypt	only)

       autocrypt_reply
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	replying to an autocrypt email	automatically  enables
	      autocrypt	 in  the  reply.  You may want to unset	this if	you're
	      using the	same key for autocrypt as normal web-of-trust, so that
	      autocrypt	isn't forced on	for all	encrypted replies.  (Autocrypt
	      only)

       autoedit
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set along with $edit_headers, Mutt will  skip  the  initial
	      send-menu	 (prompting  for subject and recipients) and allow you
	      to immediately begin editing the	body  of  your	message.   The
	      send-menu	 may  still be accessed	once you have finished editing
	      the body of your message.

	      Note: when this option is	set, you cannot	 use  send-hooks  that
	      depend  on  the recipients when composing	a new (non-reply) mes-
	      sage, as the initial list	of recipients is empty.

	      Also see $fast_reply.

       background_edit
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	Mutt will run $editor in the background	during message
	      composition.  A landing page will	display, waiting for the $edi-
	      tor to exit.  The	landing	page may be exited,  allowing  perusal
	      of  the  mailbox,	 or  even  for	other messages to be composed.
	      Backgrounded  sessions  may  be  returned	 to  via  the	<back-
	      ground-compose-menu> function.

	      For  background editing to work properly,	$editor	must be	set to
	      an editor	that does not try to use the Mutt terminal: for	 exam-
	      ple  a graphical editor, or a script launching (and waiting for)
	      the editor in another Gnu	Screen window.

	      For more details,	see "bgedit" ("Background Editing" in the man-
	      ual).

       background_confirm_quit
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	if there are any background edit sessions, you will be
	      prompted to confirm exiting  Mutt,  in  addition	to  the	 $quit
	      prompt.

       background_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%10S %7p %s"

	      This  variable  describes	the format of the "background compose"
	      menu.  The following printf(3)-style sequences are understood:
	      %i     parent message id (for replies and	forwarded messages)
	      %n     the running number	on the menu
	      %p     pid of the	$editor	process
	      %r     comma separated list of "To:" recipients
	      %R     comma separated list of "Cc:" recipients
	      %s     subject of	the message
	      %S     status of the $editor process: running/finished

       beep
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When this	variable is set, mutt will beep	when an	error occurs.

       beep_new
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When this	variable is set, mutt will beep	whenever it  prints  a
	      message  notifying  you of new mail.  This is independent	of the
	      setting of the $beep variable.

       bounce
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      Controls whether you will	be asked to confirm bouncing messages.
	      If set to	yes you	don't get asked	if you want to bounce  a  mes-
	      sage.  Setting  this variable to no is not generally useful, and
	      thus not recommended, because you	are unable to bounce messages.

       bounce_delivered
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When this	variable is set, mutt will include Delivered-To	 head-
	      ers  when	 bouncing  messages.   Postfix users may wish to unset
	      this variable.

       braille_friendly
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When this	variable is set, mutt will place the cursor at the be-
	      ginning of the current line in menus, even when the  $arrow_cur-
	      sor  variable is unset, making it	easier for blind persons using
	      Braille displays to follow these menus.  The option is unset  by
	      default  because	many  visual terminals don't permit making the
	      cursor invisible.

       browser_abbreviate_mailboxes
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When this	variable is set, mutt will abbreviate mailbox names in
	      the browser mailbox list,	using '~' and '=' shortcuts.

	      The default "alpha" setting of $sort_browser  uses  locale-based
	      sorting  (using  strcoll(3)),  which  ignores  some punctuation.
	      This can lead to some situations where the  order	 doesn't  make
	      intuitive	 sense.	  In those cases, it may be desirable to unset
	      this variable.

       browser_sticky_cursor
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When this	variable is set, the browser will attempt to keep  the
	      cursor  on  the  same mailbox when performing various functions.
	      These include moving up a	directory, toggling between  mailboxes
	      and  directory  listing,	creating/renaming  a mailbox, toggling
	      subscribed mailboxes, and	entering a new mask.

       certificate_file
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/.mutt_certificates"

	      This variable specifies the  file	 where	the  certificates  you
	      trust are	saved. When an unknown certificate is encountered, you
	      are  asked  if  you accept it or not. If you accept it, the cer-
	      tificate can also	be saved in this file and further  connections
	      are automatically	accepted.

	      You  can	also  manually	add  CA	certificates in	this file. Any
	      server certificate that is signed	with one of these CA  certifi-
	      cates is also automatically accepted.

	      Example:

	      set certificate_file=~/.mutt/certificates

	      (OpenSSL and GnuTLS only)

       change_folder_next
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  this variable is set, the <change-folder> function mailbox
	      suggestion will start at the next	 folder	 in  your  "mailboxes"
	      list, instead of starting	at the first folder in the list.

       charset
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Character	 set  your  terminal uses to display and enter textual
	      data.  It	is also	the fallback for $send_charset.

	      Upon startup Mutt	tries to derive	this  value  from  environment
	      variables	such as	$LC_CTYPE or $LANG.

	      Note: It should only be set in case Mutt isn't able to determine
	      the character set	used correctly.

       check_mbox_size
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When this	variable is set, mutt will use file size attribute in-
	      stead of access time when	checking for new mail in mbox and mmdf
	      folders.

	      This  variable  is  unset	 by default and	should only be enabled
	      when new mail detection for these	folder types is	unreliable  or
	      doesn't work.

	      Note that	enabling this variable should happen before any	"mail-
	      boxes" directives	occur in configuration files regarding mbox or
	      mmdf  folders  because  mutt  needs to determine the initial new
	      mail status of such a mailbox by performing a fast mailbox  scan
	      when  it	is defined.  Afterwards	the new	mail status is tracked
	      by file size changes.

       check_new
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Note: this option	only affects maildir and MH style mailboxes.

	      When set,	Mutt will check	for new	mail delivered while the mail-
	      box is open.  Especially with MH mailboxes, this	operation  can
	      take  quite  some	 time since it involves	scanning the directory
	      and checking each	file to	see if it has already been looked  at.
	      If  this	variable  is unset, no check for new mail is performed
	      while the	mailbox	is open.

       collapse_unread
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When unset, Mutt will not	collapse a thread if it	 contains  any
	      unread messages.

       compose_confirm_detach_first
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set,  Mutt will prompt for confirmation when trying	to use
	      <detach-file> on the first entry in the compose menu.   This  is
	      to  help prevent irreversible loss of the	typed message by acci-
	      dentally hitting 'D' in the menu.

	      Note: Mutt only prompts for the first entry.   It	 doesn't  keep
	      track  of	 which message is the typed message if the entries are
	      reordered, or if the first entry was already deleted.

       compose_format
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "-- Mutt: Compose  [Approx. msg size: %l	  Atts:	%a]%>-"

	      Controls the format of the status	line displayed	in  the	 "com-
	      pose"  menu.   This string is similar to $status_format, but has
	      its own set of printf(3)-like sequences:
	      %a     total number of attachments
	      %h     local hostname
	      %l     approximate size (in bytes) of the	current	 message  (see
		     formatstrings-size)
	      %v     Mutt version string

	      See  the	text describing	the $status_format option for more in-
	      formation	on how to set $compose_format.

       config_charset
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      When defined, Mutt will recode commands in rc  files  from  this
	      encoding	to  the	current	character set as specified by $charset
	      and aliases written to $alias_file from  the  current  character
	      set.

	      Please note that if setting $charset it must be done before set-
	      ting $config_charset.

	      Recoding	should be avoided as it	may render unconvertable char-
	      acters as	question marks which can lead to  undesired  side  ef-
	      fects (for example in regular expressions).

       confirmappend
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set, Mutt will prompt for confirmation when	appending mes-
	      sages to an existing mailbox.

       confirmcreate
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will prompt for confirmation when saving messages
	      to a mailbox which does not yet exist before creating it.

       connect_timeout
	      Type: number
	      Default: 30

	      Causes Mutt to timeout a network connection (for	IMAP,  POP  or
	      SMTP)  after  this many seconds if the connection	is not able to
	      be established.  A negative value	causes Mutt  to	 wait  indefi-
	      nitely for the connection	attempt	to succeed.

       content_type
	      Type: string
	      Default: "text/plain"

	      Sets  the	 default  Content-Type	for the	body of	newly composed
	      messages.

       copy
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      This variable controls whether or	not copies  of	your  outgoing
	      messages	will be	saved for later	references.  Also see $record,
	      $save_name, $force_name and "fcc-hook".

       copy_decode_weed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls whether Mutt will weed headers when invoking  the  <de-
	      code-copy> or <decode-save> functions.

       count_alternatives
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set, Mutt will recurse inside multipart/alternatives while
	      performing attachment searching and counting (see	attachments).

	      Traditionally, multipart/alternative parts  have	simply	repre-
	      sented  different	 encodings  of	the main content of the	email.
	      Unfortunately, some mail clients have started to place email at-
	      tachments	inside one of alternatives.  Setting this  will	 allow
	      Mutt  to	find  and count	matching attachments hidden there, and
	      include them in the index	via %X or through ~X pattern matching.

       cursor_overlay
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	Mutt will overlay the indicator,  tree,	 sidebar_high-
	      light,  and sidebar_indicator colors onto	the currently selected
	      line.  This will allow default colors in those to	be overridden,
	      and for attributes to be merged between the layers.

       crypt_autoencrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Setting this variable will cause Mutt to always attempt  to  PGP
	      encrypt outgoing messages.  This is probably only	useful in con-
	      nection to the "send-hook" command.  It can be overridden	by use
	      of  the  pgp menu, when encryption is not	required or signing is
	      requested	as well.  If $smime_is_default is set, then OpenSSL is
	      used instead to create S/MIME messages and settings can be over-
	      ridden by	use of the smime menu instead.	(Crypto	only)

       crypt_autopgp
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This variable controls whether or	not mutt may automatically en-
	      able PGP encryption/signing for messages.	 See  also  $crypt_au-
	      toencrypt,   $crypt_replyencrypt,	  $crypt_autosign,  $crypt_re-
	      plysign and $smime_is_default.

       crypt_autosign
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Setting this variable will cause Mutt to always attempt to cryp-
	      tographically sign outgoing messages.  This can be overridden by
	      use of the pgp menu, when	signing	is not required	or  encryption
	      is  requested as well. If	$smime_is_default is set, then OpenSSL
	      is used instead to create	S/MIME messages	and  settings  can  be
	      overridden  by  use  of  the smime menu instead of the pgp menu.
	      (Crypto only)

       crypt_autosmime
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This variable controls whether or	not mutt may automatically en-
	      able S/MIME encryption/signing for messages. See also $crypt_au-
	      toencrypt,  $crypt_replyencrypt,	 $crypt_autosign,   $crypt_re-
	      plysign and $smime_is_default.

       crypt_confirmhook
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set, then you	will be	prompted for confirmation of keys when
	      using the	crypt-hook command.  If	unset,	no  such  confirmation
	      prompt  will be presented.  This is generally considered unsafe,
	      especially where typos are concerned.

       crypt_opportunistic_encrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Setting this variable will cause Mutt  to	 automatically	enable
	      and  disable  encryption,	based on whether all message recipient
	      keys can be located by Mutt.

	      When this	option is enabled, Mutt	will enable/disable encryption
	      each time	the TO,	CC, and	BCC lists are edited.  If  $edit_head-
	      ers  is  set,  Mutt  will	 also  do  so each time	the message is
	      edited.

	      While this is set, encryption  can't  be	manually  enabled/dis-
	      abled.   The pgp or smime	menus provide a	selection to temporar-
	      ily disable this option for the current message.

	      If $crypt_autoencrypt or $crypt_replyencrypt  enable  encryption
	      for  a  message,	this option will be disabled for that message.
	      It can be	 manually  re-enabled  in  the	pgp  or	 smime	menus.
	      (Crypto only)

       crypt_opportunistic_encrypt_strong_keys
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	this modifies the behavior of $crypt_opportunistic_en-
	      crypt  to	only search for	"strong	keys", that is,	keys with full
	      validity according to the	web-of-trust algorithm.	  A  key  with
	      marginal	or  no	validity will not enable opportunistic encryp-
	      tion.

	      For S/MIME, the behavior depends on the backend.	Classic	S/MIME
	      will filter for certificates with	the 't'	(trusted) flag in  the
	      .index  file.   The  GPGME  backend will use the same filters as
	      with OpenPGP, and	depends	on GPGME's  logic  for	assigning  the
	      GPGME_VALIDITY_FULL and GPGME_VALIDITY_ULTIMATE validity flag.

       crypt_protected_headers_read
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set, Mutt will display protected headers in	the pager, and
	      will update the index and	header	cache  with  revised  headers.
	      Protected	headers	are stored inside the encrypted	or signed part
	      of  an  an  email, to prevent disclosure or tampering.  For more
	      information see  https://github.com/autocrypt/protected-headers.
	      Currently	Mutt only supports the Subject header.

	      Encrypted	 messages using	protected headers often	substitute the
	      exposed Subject header  with  a  dummy  value  (see  $crypt_pro-
	      tected_headers_subject).	 Mutt  will  update its	concept	of the
	      correct subject after the	message	is opened, i.e.	via the	 <dis-
	      play-message>  function.	If you reply to	a message before open-
	      ing it, Mutt will	end up using the dummy Subject header,	so  be
	      sure to open such	a message first.  (Crypto only)

       crypt_protected_headers_save
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  $crypt_protected_headers_read is set, and a	message	with a
	      protected	Subject	is opened, Mutt	will save the updated  Subject
	      into  the	header cache by	default.  This allows searching/limit-
	      ing based	on the protected Subject  header  if  the  mailbox  is
	      re-opened,  without  having  to  re-open	the message each time.
	      However, for mbox/mh mailbox types, or if	header caching is  not
	      set  up,	you  would  need  to re-open the message each time the
	      mailbox was reopened before you could see	or search/limit	on the
	      protected	subject	again.

	      When this	variable is set, Mutt additionally saves the protected
	      Subject back in the clear-text message headers.	This  provides
	      better  usability,  but  with  the tradeoff of reduced security.
	      The protected Subject header, which may have previously been en-
	      crypted, is now stored in	clear-text  in	the  message  headers.
	      Copying the message elsewhere, via Mutt or external tools, could
	      expose this previously encrypted data.  Please make sure you un-
	      derstand	the  consequences of this before you enable this vari-
	      able.  (Crypto only)

       crypt_protected_headers_subject
	      Type: string
	      Default: "..."

	      When $crypt_protected_headers_write is set, and the  message  is
	      marked for encryption, this will be substituted into the Subject
	      field  in	 the message headers.  To prevent a subject from being
	      substituted, unset this variable,	or set it to the empty string.
	      (Crypto only)

       crypt_protected_headers_write
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	Mutt will generate protected headers  for  signed  and
	      encrypted	 emails.   Protected headers are stored	inside the en-
	      crypted or signed	part of	an an email, to	prevent	disclosure  or
	      tampering.   For	more  information  see	https://github.com/au-
	      tocrypt/protected-headers.  Currently  Mutt  only	 supports  the
	      Subject header.  (Crypto only)

       crypt_replyencrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, automatically PGP	or OpenSSL encrypt replies to messages
	      which are	encrypted.  (Crypto only)

       crypt_replysign
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set,	automatically  PGP or OpenSSL sign replies to messages
	      which are	signed.

	      Note: this does not work on  messages  that  are	encrypted  and
	      signed!  (Crypto only)

       crypt_replysignencrypted
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set,	automatically  PGP or OpenSSL sign replies to messages
	      which are	 encrypted.  This  makes  sense	 in  combination  with
	      $crypt_replyencrypt,  because it allows you to sign all messages
	      which are	automatically encrypted.  This works around the	 prob-
	      lem noted	in $crypt_replysign, that mutt is not able to find out
	      whether an encrypted message is also signed.  (Crypto only)

       crypt_timestamp
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set, mutt will include a time	stamp in the lines surrounding
	      PGP or S/MIME output, so spoofing	such lines is more  difficult.
	      If  you are using	colors to mark these lines, and	rely on	these,
	      you may unset this setting.  (Crypto only)

       crypt_use_gpgme
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This variable controls the use of	the GPGME-enabled crypto back-
	      ends.  If	it is set and Mutt was built with gpgme	 support,  the
	      gpgme  code for S/MIME and PGP will be used instead of the clas-
	      sic code.	 Note that you need to set this	option in .muttrc;  it
	      won't have any effect when used interactively.

	      Note  that the GPGME backend does	not support creating old-style
	      inline (traditional)  PGP	 encrypted  or	signed	messages  (see
	      $pgp_autoinline).

       crypt_use_pka
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls	     whether	   mutt	      uses	 PKA	  (see
	      http://www.g10code.de/docs/pka-intro.de.pdf)  during   signature
	      verification (only supported by the GPGME	backend).

       crypt_verify_sig
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      If "yes",	always attempt to verify PGP or	S/MIME signatures.  If
	      "ask-*",	ask  whether or	not to verify the signature.  If "no",
	      never attempt to verify cryptographic signatures.	 (Crypto only)

       date_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "!%a, %b	%d, %Y at %I:%M:%S%p %Z"

	      This variable controls the format	of the	date  printed  by  the
	      "%d"  sequence  in  $index_format.   This	is passed to the strf-
	      time(3) function to process the date, see	the man	page  for  the
	      proper syntax.

	      Unless  the  first  character in the string is a bang ("!"), the
	      month and	week day names are expanded according to  the  locale.
	      If the first character in	the string is a	bang, the bang is dis-
	      carded,  and  the	 month	and  week day names in the rest	of the
	      string are expanded in the C locale (that	is in US English).

       default_hook
	      Type: string
	      Default: "~f %s !~P | (~P	~C %s)"

	      This variable controls how "message-hook", "reply-hook",	"send-
	      hook",  "send2-hook", "save-hook", and "fcc-hook"	will be	inter-
	      preted if	they are specified with	only a simple regexp,  instead
	      of a matching pattern.  The hooks	are expanded when they are de-
	      clared,  so a hook will be interpreted according to the value of
	      this variable at the time	the hook is declared.

	      The default value	matches	if the message is either from  a  user
	      matching	the regular expression given, or if it is from you (if
	      the from address matches "alternates") and is to or cc'ed	 to  a
	      user matching the	given regular expression.

       delete
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      Controls whether or not messages are really deleted when closing
	      or  synchronizing	a mailbox.  If set to yes, messages marked for
	      deleting will automatically be purged without prompting.	If set
	      to no, messages marked for deletion will be kept in the mailbox.

	      This  option  is	ignored	 for  maildir-style   mailboxes	  when
	      $maildir_trash is	set.

       delete_untag
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  this	option	is  set, mutt will untag messages when marking
	      them for deletion.  This	applies	 when  you  either  explicitly
	      delete a message,	or when	you save it to another folder.

       digest_collapse
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If this option is	set, mutt's received-attachments menu will not
	      show  the	subparts of individual messages	in a multipart/digest.
	      To see these subparts, press "v" on that menu.

       display_filter
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      When set,	specifies a command used to filter messages.   When  a
	      message  is  viewed  it  is  passed  as  standard	input to $dis-
	      play_filter, and the filtered message is read from the  standard
	      output.

       dotlock_program
	      Type: path
	      Default: "/usr/local/bin/mutt_dotlock"

	      Contains	the  path  of the mutt_dotlock(1) binary to be used by
	      mutt.

       dsn_notify
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This variable sets the request  for  when	 notification  is  re-
	      turned.	The  string  consists  of  a  comma separated list (no
	      spaces!) of one or more of the following:	never,	to  never  re-
	      quest  notification,  failure, to	request	notification on	trans-
	      mission failure, delay, to be notified of	message	 delays,  suc-
	      cess, to be notified of successful transmission.

	      Example:

	      set dsn_notify="failure,delay"

	      Note:  when  using $sendmail for delivery, you should not	enable
	      this unless you are either using Sendmail	8.8.x or greater or  a
	      MTA  providing a sendmail(1)-compatible interface	supporting the
	      -N option	for DSN. For SMTP delivery, DSN	 support  is  auto-de-
	      tected so	that it	depends	on the server whether DSN will be used
	      or not.

       dsn_return
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  variable  controls how much	of your	message	is returned in
	      DSN messages.  It	may be set to either hdrs to return  just  the
	      message header, or full to return	the full message.

	      Example:

	      set dsn_return=hdrs

	      Note:  when  using $sendmail for delivery, you should not	enable
	      this unless you are either using Sendmail	8.8.x or greater or  a
	      MTA  providing a sendmail(1)-compatible interface	supporting the
	      -R option	for DSN. For SMTP delivery, DSN	 support  is  auto-de-
	      tected so	that it	depends	on the server whether DSN will be used
	      or not.

       duplicate_threads
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This  variable  controls	whether	 mutt,	when  $sort  is	set to
	      threads, threads messages	with the same Message-Id together.  If
	      it is set, it will indicate that it thinks they  are  duplicates
	      of each other with an equals sign	in the thread tree.

       edit_headers
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This  option allows you to edit the header of your outgoing mes-
	      sages along with the body	of your	message.

	      Although the compose menu	may have localized header labels,  the
	      labels  passed to	your editor will be standard RFC 2822 headers,
	      (e.g. To:, Cc:, Subject:).  Headers added	in  your  editor  must
	      also be RFC 2822 headers,	or one of the pseudo headers listed in
	      "edit-header".   Mutt  will  not understand localized header la-
	      bels, just as it would not when parsing an actual	email.

	      Note that	changes	made to	the References:	and Date: headers  are
	      ignored for interoperability reasons.

       editor
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This  variable  specifies	 which editor is used by mutt.	It de-
	      faults to	the value of  the  $VISUAL,  or	 $EDITOR,  environment
	      variable,	or to the string "vi" if neither of those are set.

	      The  $editor  string  may	contain	a %s escape, which will	be re-
	      placed by	the name of the	file to	be edited.  If the  %s	escape
	      does  not	 appear	 in $editor, a space and the name to be	edited
	      are appended.

	      The resulting string is then executed by running

	      sh -c 'string'

	      where string is the expansion of $editor described above.

       encode_from
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will quoted-printable encode messages  when  they
	      contain  the string "From	" (note	the trailing space) in the be-
	      ginning of a line.  This is useful to avoid the  tampering  cer-
	      tain mail	delivery and transport agents tend to do with messages
	      (in  order  to  prevent tools from misinterpreting the line as a
	      mbox message separator).

       entropy_file
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      The file which includes random data that is used	to  initialize
	      SSL library functions. (OpenSSL only)

       envelope_from_address
	      Type: e-mail address
	      Default: ""

	      Manually	sets  the envelope sender for outgoing messages.  This
	      value is ignored if $use_envelope_from is	unset.

       error_history
	      Type: number
	      Default: 30

	      This variable controls the size (in  number  of  strings	remem-
	      bered)  of  the  error messages displayed	by mutt.  These	can be
	      shown with the <error-history> function.	The history is cleared
	      each time	this variable is set.

       escape
	      Type: string
	      Default: "~"

	      Escape character to use for functions in the built-in editor.

       fast_reply
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	the initial prompt  for	 recipients  and  subject  are
	      skipped  when  replying  to messages, and	the initial prompt for
	      subject is skipped when forwarding messages.

	      Note: this variable has no effect	when the $autoedit variable is
	      set.

       fcc_attach
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      This variable controls whether or	not  attachments  on  outgoing
	      messages are saved along with the	main body of your message.

	      Note: $fcc_before_send forces the	default	(set) behavior of this
	      option.

       fcc_before_send
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  this  variable  is set, FCCs will occur before sending the
	      message.	Before sending,	the message cannot be manipulated,  so
	      it  will	be  stored  the	 exact	same  as sent: $fcc_attach and
	      $fcc_clear will be ignored (using	their default values).

	      When unset, the default, FCCs will occur after  sending.	 Vari-
	      ables  $fcc_attach and $fcc_clear	will be	respected, allowing it
	      to be stored without attachments or  encryption/signing  if  de-
	      sired.

       fcc_clear
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  this  variable is set, FCCs	will be	stored unencrypted and
	      unsigned,	even when  the	actual	message	 is  encrypted	and/or
	      signed.

	      Note:  $fcc_before_send  forces  the default (unset) behavior of
	      this option.  (PGP only)

	      See also $pgp_self_encrypt, $smime_self_encrypt.

       fcc_delimiter
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      When specified, this allows the ability to Fcc to	more than  one
	      mailbox.	The fcc	value will be split by this delimiter and Mutt
	      will evaluate each part as a mailbox separately.

	      See $record, "fcc-hook", and "fcc-save-hook".

       flag_safe
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, flagged messages cannot be deleted.

       folder
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/Mail"

	      Specifies	 the default location of your mailboxes.  A "+"	or "="
	      at the beginning of a pathname will be expanded to the value  of
	      this  variable.  Note that if you	change this variable (from the
	      default) value you need to make sure that	the assignment	occurs
	      before  you  use "+" or "=" for any other	variables since	expan-
	      sion takes place when handling the "mailboxes" command.

       folder_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%2C %t %N %F %2l %-8.8u	%-8.8g %8s %d %f"

	      This variable allows you to customize the	file  browser  display
	      to  your	personal taste.	 This string is	similar	to $index_for-
	      mat, but has its own set of printf(3)-like sequences:
	      %C     current file number
	      %d     date/time folder was last modified
	      %D     date/time folder was last modified	using $date_format.
	      %f     filename ("/" is appended to directory names, "@" to sym-
		     bolic links and "*" to executable files)
	      %F     file permissions
	      %g     group name	(or numeric gid, if missing)
	      %l     number of hard links
	      %m     number of messages	in the mailbox *
	      %n     number of unread messages in the mailbox *
	      %N     N if mailbox has new mail,	blank otherwise
	      %s     size in bytes (see	formatstrings-size)
	      %t     "*" if the	file is	tagged,	blank otherwise
	      %u     owner name	(or numeric uid, if missing)
	      %>X    right justify the rest of the string and pad with charac-
		     ter "X"
	      %|X    pad to the	end of the line	with character "X"
	      %*X    soft-fill with character "X" as pad

	      For an explanation of "soft-fill", see the  $index_format	 docu-
	      mentation.

	      *	= can be optionally printed if nonzero

	      %m,  %n,	and %N only work for monitored mailboxes.  %m requires
	      $mail_check_stats	to be set.  %n requires	 $mail_check_stats  to
	      be set (except for IMAP mailboxes).

       followup_to
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls	whether	or not the "Mail-Followup-To:" header field is
	      generated	when sending mail.  When set, Mutt will	generate  this
	      field  when  you are replying to a known mailing list, specified
	      with the "subscribe" or "lists" commands.

	      This field has two purposes.  First, preventing you from receiv-
	      ing duplicate copies of replies to messages which	 you  send  to
	      mailing lists, and second, ensuring that you do get a reply sep-
	      arately  for  any	 messages sent to known	lists to which you are
	      not subscribed.

	      The header will contain only the list's address  for  subscribed
	      lists,  and both the list	address	and your own email address for
	      unsubscribed lists.  Without this	header,	a group	reply to  your
	      message  sent to a subscribed list will be sent to both the list
	      and your address,	resulting in two copies	of the same email  for
	      you.

       force_name
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This  variable  is  similar to $save_name, except	that Mutt will
	      store a copy of your outgoing message by the username of the ad-
	      dress you	are sending to even if that mailbox does not exist.

	      Also see the $record variable.

       forward_attachments
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      When forwarding inline (i.e.  $mime_forward  unset  or  answered
	      with  "no" and $forward_decode set), attachments which cannot be
	      decoded in a reasonable manner will be  attached	to  the	 newly
	      composed	message	 if  this  quadoption  is set or answered with
	      "yes".

       forward_attribution_intro
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "----- Forwarded	message	from %f	-----"

	      This is the string that will precede a message  which  has  been
	      forwarded	 in  the main body of a	message	(when $mime_forward is
	      unset).  For a full listing of defined printf(3)-like  sequences
	      see the section on $index_format.	 See also $attribution_locale.

       forward_attribution_trailer
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "----- End forwarded message -----"

	      This  is	the  string  that will follow a	message	which has been
	      forwarded	in the main body of a message (when  $mime_forward  is
	      unset).	For a full listing of defined printf(3)-like sequences
	      see the section on $index_format.	 See also $attribution_locale.

       forward_decode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls the decoding of complex MIME messages  into  text/plain
	      when  forwarding	a message.  The	message	header is also RFC2047
	      decoded.	This variable is only used, if $mime_forward is	unset,
	      otherwise	$mime_forward_decode is	used instead.

       forward_decrypt
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      This quadoption controls the handling of encrypted messages when
	      forwarding or attaching a	message.   When	 set  to  or  answered
	      "yes", the outer layer of	encryption is stripped off.

	      This  variable  is  used	if $mime_forward is set	and $mime_for-
	      ward_decode is unset.  It	is also	used when attaching a  message
	      via <attach-message> in the compose menu.	 (PGP only)

       forward_edit
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      This  quadoption	controls  whether or not the user is automati-
	      cally placed in the editor when forwarding messages.  For	 those
	      who  always  want	to forward with	no modification, use a setting
	      of "no".

       forward_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "[%a: %s]"

	      This variable controls the default  subject  when	 forwarding  a
	      message.	It uses	the same format	sequences as the $index_format
	      variable.

       forward_quote
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  forwarded  messages included in the main body	of the
	      message (when $mime_forward is unset) will be quoted using  $in-
	      dent_string.

       from
	      Type: e-mail address
	      Default: ""

	      When set,	this variable contains a default from address.	It can
	      be  overridden using "my_hdr" (including from a "send-hook") and
	      $reverse_name.  This variable is ignored if $use_from is unset.

	      This setting defaults to the contents of the  environment	 vari-
	      able $EMAIL.

       gecos_mask
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: "^[^,]*"

	      A	 regular expression used by mutt to parse the GECOS field of a
	      password entry when expanding the	alias.	The default value will
	      return the string	up to the first	"," encountered.  If the GECOS
	      field contains a string  like  "lastname,	 firstname"  then  you
	      should set it to ".*".

	      This  can	 be  useful if you see the following behavior: you ad-
	      dress an e-mail to user ID "stevef" whose	full  name  is	"Steve
	      Franklin".     If	  mutt	 expands   "stevef"   to   ""Franklin"
	      stevef@foo.bar" then you should set the $gecos_mask to a regular
	      expression that will match the whole name	so  mutt  will	expand
	      "Franklin" to "Franklin, Steve".

       hdrs
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  unset,  the	 header	 fields	normally added by the "my_hdr"
	      command are not created.	This variable  must  be	 unset	before
	      composing	a new message or replying in order to take effect.  If
	      set,  the	user defined header fields are added to	every new mes-
	      sage.

       header
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	this variable causes Mutt to include the header	of the
	      message you are replying to into the  edit  buffer.   The	 $weed
	      setting applies.

       header_cache
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This  variable points to the header cache	database.  If pointing
	      to a directory Mutt will contain a header	 cache	database  file
	      per  folder,  if	pointing  to a file that file will be a	single
	      global header cache. By default it is unset so no	header caching
	      will be used.  If	pointing to a directory, it must be created in
	      advance.

	      Header caching can greatly improve speed when opening POP,  IMAP
	      MH or Maildir folders, see "caching" for details.

       header_cache_compress
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  mutt  is compiled with qdbm, tokyocabinet, or kyotocabinet
	      as header	cache backend,	this  option  determines  whether  the
	      database	will  be  compressed.  Compression results in database
	      files roughly being one fifth of the usual  diskspace,  but  the
	      decompression can	result in a slower opening of cached folder(s)
	      which  in	 general  is still much	faster than opening non	header
	      cached folders.

       header_cache_pagesize
	      Type: number (long)
	      Default: 16384

	      When mutt	is compiled with either	gdbm or	 bdb4  as  the	header
	      cache  backend, this option changes the database page size.  Too
	      large or too small values	can waste space, memory, or CPU	 time.
	      The default should be more or less optimal for most use cases.

       header_color_partial
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  color	header regexps behave like color body regexps:
	      color is applied to the exact text matched by the	regexp.	  When
	      unset, color is applied to the entire header.

	      One  use	of  this  option  might	 be to apply color to just the
	      header labels.

	      See "color" for more details.

       help
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	help lines describing the bindings for the major func-
	      tions provided by	each menu are displayed	on the first  line  of
	      the screen.

	      Note:  The  binding will not be displayed	correctly if the func-
	      tion is bound to a sequence  rather  than	 a  single  keystroke.
	      Also,  the  help line may	not be updated if a binding is changed
	      while Mutt is running.  Since this variable is  primarily	 aimed
	      at new users, neither of these should present a major problem.

       hidden_host
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  mutt will skip the host name part of $hostname vari-
	      able when	adding the domain part to  addresses.	This  variable
	      does  not	 affect	the generation of Message-IDs, and it will not
	      lead to the cut-off of first-level domains.

       hide_limited
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will not show the presence	of messages  that  are
	      hidden by	limiting, in the thread	tree.

       hide_missing
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	mutt will not show the presence	of missing messages in
	      the thread tree.

       hide_thread_subject
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set,  mutt	will  not  show	the subject of messages	in the
	      thread tree that have the	same subject as	their parent or	 clos-
	      est previously displayed sibling.

       hide_top_limited
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  mutt will not	show the presence of messages that are
	      hidden by	limiting, at the top of	threads	in  the	 thread	 tree.
	      Note  that  when	$hide_limited is set, this option will have no
	      effect.

       hide_top_missing
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	mutt will not show the presence	of missing messages at
	      the  top	of  threads  in	 the  thread  tree.   Note  that  when
	      $hide_missing is set, this option	will have no effect.

       history
	      Type: number
	      Default: 10

	      This  variable  controls	the  size (in number of	strings	remem-
	      bered) of	the string history buffer per category.	The buffer  is
	      cleared each time	the variable is	set.

       history_file
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/.mutthistory"

	      The file in which	Mutt will save its history.

	      Also see $save_history.

       history_remove_dups
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  all of the string history will be scanned for	dupli-
	      cates when a new entry is	added.	Duplicate entries in the $his-
	      tory_file	will also be removed  when  it	is  periodically  com-
	      pacted.

       honor_disposition
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  Mutt will not	display	attachments with a disposition
	      of "attachment" inline even if it	could render the part to plain
	      text. These MIME parts can only be viewed	 from  the  attachment
	      menu.

	      If unset,	Mutt will render all MIME parts	it can properly	trans-
	      form to plain text.

       honor_followup_to
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      This  variable controls whether or not a Mail-Followup-To	header
	      is honored when group-replying to	a message.

       hostname
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Specifies	the fully-qualified hostname of	 the  system  mutt  is
	      running  on containing the host's	name and the DNS domain	it be-
	      longs to.	It is used as the domain part (after  "@")  for	 local
	      email addresses as well as Message-Id headers.

	      Its  value is determined at startup as follows: the node's host-
	      name is first determined by the uname(3) function.   The	domain
	      is  then	looked	up using the gethostname(2) and	getaddrinfo(3)
	      functions.  If those calls are unable to determine  the  domain,
	      the  full	value returned by uname	is used.  Optionally, Mutt can
	      be compiled with a fixed domain name in which  case  a  detected
	      one is not used.

	      Starting	in  Mutt 2.0, the operations described in the previous
	      paragraph	are performed after the	muttrc is  processed,  instead
	      of beforehand.  This way,	if the DNS operations are creating de-
	      lays  at	startup,  you  can avoid those by manually setting the
	      value in your muttrc.

	      Also see $use_domain and $hidden_host.

       idn_decode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will show you international domain	names decoded.
	      Note: You	can use	IDNs for addresses  even  if  this  is	unset.
	      This variable only affects decoding. (IDN	only)

       idn_encode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will encode international domain names using IDN.
	      Unset this if your SMTP server can handle	newer (RFC 6531) UTF-8
	      encoded domains. (IDN only)

       ignore_linear_white_space
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This option replaces linear-white-space between encoded-word and
	      text  to	a  single space	to prevent the display of MIME-encoded
	      "Subject:" field from being divided into multiple	lines.

       ignore_list_reply_to
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Affects the behavior of the <reply> function  when  replying  to
	      messages	from  mailing  lists (as defined by the	"subscribe" or
	      "lists" commands).  When set, if the "Reply-To:" field is	set to
	      the same value as	the "To:" field, Mutt assumes  that  the  "Re-
	      ply-To:" field was set by	the mailing list to automate responses
	      to  the  list, and will ignore this field.  To direct a response
	      to the mailing list when this option is set, use	the  <list-re-
	      ply>  function;  <group-reply> will reply	to both	the sender and
	      the list.

       imap_authenticators
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This is a	colon-delimited	list of	 authentication	 methods  mutt
	      may  attempt  to	use  to	log in to an IMAP server, in the order
	      mutt should try them.  Authentication methods are	either "login"
	      or the right side	of an IMAP "AUTH=xxx" capability string,  e.g.
	      "digest-md5", "gssapi" or	"cram-md5". This option	is case-insen-
	      sitive.  If it's unset (the default) mutt	will try all available
	      methods, in order	from most-secure to least-secure.

	      Example:

	      set imap_authenticators="gssapi:cram-md5:login"

	      Note: Mutt will only fall	back to	other  authentication  methods
	      if  the  previous	methods	are unavailable. If a method is	avail-
	      able but authentication fails, mutt will not connect to the IMAP
	      server.

       imap_check_subscribed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will fetch	the set	 of  subscribed	 folders  from
	      your  server on connection, and add them to the set of mailboxes
	      it polls for new mail just  as  if  you  had  issued  individual
	      "mailboxes" commands.

       imap_condstore
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  mutt	will use the CONDSTORE extension (RFC 7162) if
	      advertised by the	server.	 Mutt's	current	implementation is  ba-
	      sic, used	only for initial message fetching and flag updates.

	      For  some	 IMAP  servers,	 enabling  this	will slightly speed up
	      downloading initial messages.  Unfortunately, Gmail is  not  one
	      those,  and  displays  worse  performance	 when  enabled.	  Your
	      mileage may vary.

       imap_deflate
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will  use	the  COMPRESS=DEFLATE  extension  (RFC
	      4978) if advertised by the server.

	      In  general a good compression efficiency	can be achieved, which
	      speeds up	reading	large mailboxes	also on	 fairly	 good  connec-
	      tions.

       imap_delim_chars
	      Type: string
	      Default: "/."

	      This  contains  the  list	 of characters which you would like to
	      treat as folder separators for displaying	IMAP paths. In partic-
	      ular it helps in using the "=" shortcut for  your	 folder	 vari-
	      able.

       imap_fetch_chunk_size
	      Type: number (long)
	      Default: 0

	      When  set	 to  a value greater than 0, new headers will be down-
	      loaded in	groups of this many headers per	request.  If you  have
	      a	 very  large mailbox, this might prevent a timeout and discon-
	      nect when	opening	the mailbox, by	sending	a  FETCH  per  set  of
	      this  many  headers, instead of a	single FETCH for all new head-
	      ers.

       imap_headers
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Mutt requests these header fields	in  addition  to  the  default
	      headers  ("Date:", "From:", "Sender:", "Subject:", "To:",	"Cc:",
	      "Message-Id:", "References:", "Content-Type:", "Content-Descrip-
	      tion:",  "In-Reply-To:",	"Reply-To:",  "Lines:",	 "List-Post:",
	      "X-Label:")  from	IMAP servers before displaying the index menu.
	      You may want to add more headers for spam	detection.

	      Note: This is a space separated list, items should be  uppercase
	      and  not	contain	the colon, e.g.	"X-BOGOSITY X-SPAM-STATUS" for
	      the "X-Bogosity:"	and "X-Spam-Status:" header fields.

       imap_idle
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will attempt to use the IMAP  IDLE	 extension  to
	      check for	new mail in the	current	mailbox. Some servers (dovecot
	      was  the	inspiration for	this option) react badly to mutt's im-
	      plementation. If your connection seems  to  freeze  up  periodi-
	      cally, try unsetting this.

       imap_keepalive
	      Type: number
	      Default: 300

	      This  variable  specifies	 the maximum amount of time in seconds
	      that mutt	will wait before polling  open	IMAP  connections,  to
	      prevent  the  server  from closing them before mutt has finished
	      with them. The default is	well within the	RFC-specified  minimum
	      amount  of  time	(30  minutes) before a server is allowed to do
	      this, but	in practice the	RFC does get violated  every  now  and
	      then.  Reduce  this  number if you find yourself getting discon-
	      nected from your IMAP server due to inactivity.

       imap_list_subscribed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This variable configures whether IMAP folder browsing will  look
	      for only subscribed folders or all folders.  This	can be toggled
	      in the IMAP browser with the <toggle-subscribed> function.

       imap_login
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Your login name on the IMAP server.

	      This variable defaults to	the value of $imap_user.

       imap_oauth_refresh_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      The command to run to generate an	OAUTH refresh token for	autho-
	      rizing  your  connection to your IMAP server.  This command will
	      be run on	every connection attempt that uses the OAUTHBEARER au-
	      thentication mechanism.  See "oauth" for details.

       imap_pass
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Specifies	the password for your IMAP account.   If  unset,  Mutt
	      will   prompt   you  for	your  password	when  you  invoke  the
	      <imap-fetch-mail>	function or try	to open	an IMAP	folder.

	      Warning: you should only use this	 option	 when  you  are	 on  a
	      fairly  secure machine, because the superuser can	read your mut-
	      trc even if you are the only one who can read the	file.

       imap_passive
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	mutt will not open new IMAP connections	to  check  for
	      new  mail.  Mutt will only check for new mail over existing IMAP
	      connections.  This is useful if you don't	want  to  be  prompted
	      for  user/password  pairs	 on mutt invocation, or	if opening the
	      connection is slow.

       imap_peek
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	mutt will avoid	implicitly marking your	mail  as  read
	      whenever	you fetch a message from the server. This is generally
	      a	good thing, but	can  make  closing  an	IMAP  folder  somewhat
	      slower. This option exists to appease speed freaks.

       imap_pipeline_depth
	      Type: number
	      Default: 15

	      Controls	the  number of IMAP commands that may be queued	up be-
	      fore they	are sent to the	server.	A deeper pipeline reduces  the
	      amount  of time mutt must	wait for the server, and can make IMAP
	      servers feel much	more responsive. But not all servers correctly
	      handle pipelined commands, so if you  have  problems  you	 might
	      want to try setting this variable	to 0.

	      Note:  Changes  to  this variable	have no	effect on open connec-
	      tions.

       imap_poll_timeout
	      Type: number
	      Default: 15

	      This variable specifies the maximum amount of  time  in  seconds
	      that mutt	will wait for a	response when polling IMAP connections
	      for new mail, before timing out and closing the connection.  Set
	      to 0 to disable timing out.

       imap_qresync
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set, mutt will use the QRESYNC extension (RFC 7162)	if ad-
	      vertised by the server.  Mutt's current implementation is	basic,
	      used only	for initial message fetching and flag updates.

	      Note: this feature is currently experimental.  If	you experience
	      strange behavior,	such as	duplicate or missing  messages	please
	      file a bug report	to let us know.

       imap_servernoise
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set,  mutt	will  display  warning	messages from the IMAP
	      server as	error messages.	Since these messages are  often	 harm-
	      less,  or	 generated due to configuration	problems on the	server
	      which are	out of the users' hands, you may wish to suppress them
	      at some point.

       imap_user
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      The name of the user whose mail you intend to access on the IMAP
	      server.

	      This variable defaults to	your user name on the local machine.

       implicit_autoview
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set to	"yes", mutt will look for a  mailcap  entry  with  the
	      "copiousoutput"  flag  set  for every MIME attachment it doesn't
	      have an internal viewer defined for.  If such an entry is	found,
	      mutt will	use the	viewer defined in that entry  to  convert  the
	      body part	to text	form.

       include
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      Controls	whether	or not a copy of the message(s)	you are	reply-
	      ing to is	included in your reply.

       include_encrypted
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls whether or not Mutt includes separately	encrypted  at-
	      tachment contents	when replying.

	      This  variable  was  added to prevent accidental exposure	of en-
	      crypted contents when replying to	an attacker.  If a  previously
	      encrypted	 message  were	attached  by  the attacker, they could
	      trick an unwary recipient	into decrypting	and including the mes-
	      sage in their reply.

       include_onlyfirst
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls whether or not Mutt includes only the first  attachment
	      of the message you are replying.

       indent_string
	      Type: string
	      Default: "> "

	      Specifies	the string to prepend to each line of text quoted in a
	      message  to which	you are	replying.  You are strongly encouraged
	      not to change this value,	as it tends to agitate the more	fanat-
	      ical netizens.

	      The value	of this	option is ignored if $text_flowed is set,  be-
	      cause  the  quoting  mechanism  is  strictly  defined  for  for-
	      mat=flowed.

	      This option is a format string, please see  the  description  of
	      $index_format for	supported printf(3)-style sequences.

       index_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%4C %Z %{%b %d}	%-15.15L (%?l?%4l&%4c?)	%s"

	      This  variable allows you	to customize the message index display
	      to your personal taste.

	      "Format strings" are similar to the strings used in the C	 func-
	      tion  printf(3)  to format output	(see the man page for more de-
	      tails).  For an explanation of the %? construct, see  the	 $sta-
	      tus_format  description.	The following sequences	are defined in
	      Mutt:
	      %a     address of	the author
	      %A     reply-to address (if present; otherwise: address  of  au-
		     thor)
	      %b     filename of the original message folder (think mailbox)
	      %B     the list to which the letter was sent, or else the	folder
		     name (%b).
	      %c     number  of	characters (bytes) in the message (see format-
		     strings-size)
	      %C     current message number
	      %d     date and time of the message in the format	 specified  by
		     $date_format converted to sender's	time zone
	      %D     date  and	time of	the message in the format specified by
		     $date_format converted to the local time zone
	      %e     current message number in thread
	      %E     number of messages	in current thread
	      %f     sender  (address  +  real	name),	either	From:  or  Re-
		     turn-Path:
	      %F     author name, or recipient name if the message is from you
	      %H     spam attribute(s) of this message
	      %i     message-id	of the current message
	      %l     number  of	lines in the unprocessed message (may not work
		     with maildir, mh, and IMAP	folders)
	      %L     If	an address in the "To:"	or "Cc:" header	field  matches
		     an	address	defined	by the users "subscribe" command, this
		     displays "To <list-name>",	otherwise the same as %F.
	      %m     total number of message in	the mailbox
	      %M     number of hidden messages if the thread is	collapsed.
	      %N     message score
	      %n     author's real name	(or address if missing)
	      %O     original  save  folder  where  mutt  would	 formerly have
		     stashed the message: list name or recipient name  if  not
		     sent to a list
	      %P     progress  indicator  for  the built-in pager (how much of
		     the file has been displayed)
	      %r     comma separated list of "To:" recipients
	      %R     comma separated list of "Cc:" recipients
	      %s     subject of	the message
	      %S     single    character     status	of     the     message
		     ("N"/"O"/"D"/"d"/"!"/"r"/"*")
	      %t     "To:" field (recipients)
	      %T     the appropriate character from the	$to_chars string
	      %u     user (login) name of the author
	      %v     first name	of the author, or the recipient	if the message
		     is	from you
	      %X     number  of	attachments (please see	the "attachments" sec-
		     tion for possible speed effects)
	      %y     "X-Label:"	field, if present
	      %Y     "X-Label:"	field, if present, and (1) not at  part	 of  a
		     thread  tree,  (2)	 at the	top of a thread, or (3)	"X-La-
		     bel:" is different	from preceding message's "X-Label:".
	      %Z     a three character set of message status flags.  the first
		     character	      is	new/read/replied	 flags
		     ("n"/"o"/"r"/"O"/"N").   the second is deleted or encryp-
		     tion flags	("D"/"d"/"S"/"P"/"s"/"K").  the	third  is  ei-
		     ther  tagged/flagged  ("*"/"!"), or one of	the characters
		     listed in $to_chars.
	      %@name@
		     insert and	evaluate format-string from the	matching  "in-
		     dex-format-hook" command
	      %{fmt} the date and time of the message is converted to sender's
		     time  zone, and "fmt" is expanded by the library function
		     strftime(3); a leading bang disables locales
	      %[fmt] the date and time of the message is converted to the  lo-
		     cal time zone, and	"fmt" is expanded by the library func-
		     tion strftime(3); a leading bang disables locales
	      %(fmt) the  local	 date  and time	when the message was received.
		     "fmt" is expanded by the library function strftime(3);  a
		     leading bang disables locales
	      %<fmt> the  current local	time. "fmt" is expanded	by the library
		     function strftime(3); a leading bang disables locales.
	      %>X    right justify the rest of the string and pad with charac-
		     ter "X"
	      %|X    pad to the	end of the line	with character "X"
	      %*X    soft-fill with character "X" as pad

	      Note that	for mbox/mmdf, "%l" applies to	the  unprocessed  mes-
	      sage,  and  for  maildir/mh,  the	 value comes from the "Lines:"
	      header field when	present	(the meaning is	 normally  the	same).
	      Thus  the	 value	depends	on the encodings used in the different
	      parts of the message and has little meaning in practice.

	      "Soft-fill" deserves some	explanation:  Normal  right-justifica-
	      tion  will  print	everything to the left of the "%>", displaying
	      padding and whatever lies	to the right only if there's room.  By
	      contrast,	soft-fill gives	priority to the	right-hand side, guar-
	      anteeing space to	display	it and showing padding only if there's
	      still  room.  If necessary, soft-fill will eat text leftwards to
	      make room	for rightward text.

	      Note that	these expandos are  supported  in  "save-hook",	 "fcc-
	      hook", "fcc-save-hook", and "index-format-hook".

	      They are also supported in the configuration variables $attribu-
	      tion,  $forward_attribution_intro, $forward_attribution_trailer,
	      $forward_format, $indent_string, $message_format,	$pager_format,
	      and $post_indent_string.

       ispell
	      Type: path
	      Default: "ispell"

	      How to invoke ispell (GNU's spell-checking software).

       keep_flagged
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, read messages marked as flagged will not be  moved  from
	      your  spool  mailbox  to your $mbox mailbox, or as a result of a
	      "mbox-hook" command.

       local_date_header
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, the date in the Date header of emails that you send will
	      be in your local timezone. If unset a UTC	date will be used  in-
	      stead to avoid leaking information about your current location.

       mail_check
	      Type: number
	      Default: 5

	      This variable configures how often (in seconds) mutt should look
	      for new mail. Also see the $timeout variable.

       mail_check_recent
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will only notify you about	new mail that has been
	      received	since  the last	time you opened	the mailbox.  When un-
	      set, Mutt	will notify you	if any new mail	exists in the mailbox,
	      regardless of whether you	have visited it	recently.

       mail_check_stats
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will periodically calculate message statistics of
	      a	mailbox	while polling for new mail.  It	will check for unread,
	      flagged, and total message counts.  (Note: IMAP  mailboxes  only
	      support unread and total counts).

	      Because  this  operation	is  more performance intensive,	it de-
	      faults	to    unset,	and    has    a	   separate    option,
	      $mail_check_stats_interval, to control how often to update these
	      counts.

	      Message statistics can also be explicitly	calculated by invoking
	      the <check-stats>	function.

       mail_check_stats_interval
	      Type: number
	      Default: 60

	      When  $mail_check_stats is set, this variable configures how of-
	      ten (in seconds) mutt will update	message	counts.

       mailcap_path
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This variable specifies which files to consult  when  attempting
	      to  display MIME bodies not directly supported by	Mutt.  The de-
	      fault value is generated during startup: see the "mailcap"  sec-
	      tion of the manual.

       mailcap_sanitize
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set, mutt will restrict possible characters in mailcap % ex-
	      pandos to	a well-defined set of safe characters.	 This  is  the
	      safe setting, but	we are not sure	it doesn't break some more ad-
	      vanced MIME stuff.

	      DON'T  CHANGE  THIS  SETTING UNLESS YOU ARE REALLY SURE WHAT YOU
	      ARE DOING!

       maildir_header_cache_verify
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Check for	Maildir	unaware	programs other than mutt having	 modi-
	      fied maildir files when the header cache is in use.  This	incurs
	      one  stat(2)  per	message	every time the folder is opened	(which
	      can be very slow for NFS folders).

       maildir_trash
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, messages marked  as  deleted  will  be  saved  with  the
	      maildir  trashed	flag instead of	unlinked.  Note: this only ap-
	      plies to maildir-style mailboxes.	 Setting it will have  no  ef-
	      fect on other mailbox types.

       maildir_check_cur
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set,	mutt  will  poll both the new and cur directories of a
	      maildir folder for new messages.	This might be useful if	 other
	      programs	interacting  with the folder (e.g. dovecot) are	moving
	      new messages to the cur directory.  Note that setting  this  op-
	      tion  may	 slow  down polling for	new messages in	large folders,
	      since mutt has to	scan all cur messages.

       mark_macro_prefix
	      Type: string
	      Default: "'"

	      Prefix for macros	created	using mark-message.  A new macro auto-
	      matically	generated with <mark-message>a will be	composed  from
	      this prefix and the letter a.

       mark_old
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls whether or not mutt marks new unread messages as	old if
	      you  exit	a mailbox without reading them.	 With this option set,
	      the next time you	start mutt, the	messages will show up with  an
	      "O"  next	 to  them  in the index	menu, indicating that they are
	      old.

       markers
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls the display of wrapped lines in the internal pager.  If
	      set,  a  "+"  marker  is	displayed  at the beginning of wrapped
	      lines.

	      Also see the $smart_wrap variable.

       mask
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: "!^\.[^.]"

	      A	regular	expression used	in the file browser,  optionally  pre-
	      ceded  by	 the  not  operator "!".  Only files whose names match
	      this mask	will be	shown. The match is always case-sensitive.

       mbox
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/mbox"

	      This  specifies  the  folder  into  which	 read  mail  in	  your
	      $spoolfile folder	will be	appended.

	      Also see the $move variable.

       mbox_type
	      Type: folder magic
	      Default: mbox

	      The  default mailbox type	used when creating new folders.	May be
	      any of "mbox", "MMDF", "MH" and "Maildir". This is overridden by
	      the -m command-line option.

       menu_context
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      This variable controls the number	of lines of context  that  are
	      given when scrolling through menus. (Similar to $pager_context.)

       menu_move_off
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  unset, the bottom entry of menus will never	scroll up past
	      the bottom of the	screen,	unless there  are  less	 entries  than
	      lines.  When set,	the bottom entry may move off the bottom.

       menu_scroll
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  menus	 will be scrolled up or	down one line when you
	      attempt to move across a screen boundary.	 If unset, the	screen
	      is  cleared  and	the  next or previous page of the menu is dis-
	      played (useful for slow links to avoid many redraws).

       message_cache_clean
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, mutt will	clean out obsolete entries  from  the  message
	      cache  when  the mailbox is synchronized.	You probably only want
	      to set it	every once in a	while, since it	can be a  little  slow
	      (especially for large folders).

       message_cachedir
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      Set  this	 to a directory	and mutt will cache copies of messages
	      from your	IMAP and POP servers here. You are free	to remove  en-
	      tries at any time.

	      When  setting  this variable to a	directory, mutt	needs to fetch
	      every remote message only	once and can perform  regular  expres-
	      sion searches as fast as for local folders.

	      Also see the $message_cache_clean	variable.

       message_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%s"

	      This  is	the  string displayed in the "attachment" menu for at-
	      tachments	of type	message/rfc822.	 For a full listing of defined
	      printf(3)-like sequences see the section on $index_format.

       message_id_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "<%z@%f>"

	      This variable describes the format of the	 Message-ID  generated
	      when  sending messages.  Mutt 2.0	introduced a more compact for-
	      mat, but this variable allows the	ability	 to  choose  your  own
	      format.	The value may end in "|" to invoke an external filter.
	      See formatstrings-filters.

	      Please note that the Message-ID value follows a  strict  syntax,
	      and  you	are responsible	for ensuring correctness if you	change
	      this from	the default.  In particular, the value must follow the
	      syntax in	RFC 5322: ""<" id-left "@" id-right ">"".   No	spaces
	      are  allowed, and	id-left	should follow the dot-atom-text	syntax
	      in the RFC.  The id-right	should generally be left at %f.

	      The old Message-ID format	 can  be  used	by  setting  this  to:
	      "<%Y%02m%02d%02H%02M%02S.G%c%p@%f>"

	      The following printf(3)-style sequences are understood:
	      %c     step counter looping from "A" to "Z"
	      %d     current day of the	month (GMT)
	      %f     $hostname
	      %H     current hour using	a 24-hour clock	(GMT)
	      %m     current month number (GMT)
	      %M     current minute of the hour	(GMT)
	      %p     pid of the	running	mutt process
	      %r     3 bytes of	pseudorandom data encoded in Base64
	      %S     current second of the minute (GMT)
	      %x     1 byte of pseudorandom data hex encoded (example: '1b')
	      %Y     current year using	4 digits (GMT)
	      %z     4	byte  timestamp	+ 8 bytes of pseudorandom data encoded
		     in	Base64

       meta_key
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, forces Mutt to interpret keystrokes with	the  high  bit
	      (bit  8) set as if the user had pressed the Esc key and whatever
	      key remains after	having the high	bit removed.  For example,  if
	      the key pressed has an ASCII value of 0xf8, then this is treated
	      as  if  the  user	had pressed Esc	then "x".  This	is because the
	      result of	removing the high bit from 0xf8	is 0x78, which is  the
	      ASCII character "x".

       metoo
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  unset,  Mutt	will remove your address (see the "alternates"
	      command) from the	list of	recipients when	replying to a message.

       mh_purge
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When unset, mutt will mimic mh's	behavior  and  rename  deleted
	      messages	to  ,<old  file	 name> in mh folders instead of	really
	      deleting them. This leaves the message on	disk  but  makes  pro-
	      grams  reading the folder	ignore it. If the variable is set, the
	      message files will simply	be deleted.

	      This option is similar to	$maildir_trash for Maildir folders.

       mh_seq_flagged
	      Type: string
	      Default: "flagged"

	      The name of the MH sequence used for flagged messages.

       mh_seq_replied
	      Type: string
	      Default: "replied"

	      The name of the MH sequence used to tag replied messages.

       mh_seq_unseen
	      Type: string
	      Default: "unseen"

	      The name of the MH sequence used for unseen messages.

       mime_forward
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: no

	      When set,	the message you	are forwarding will be attached	 as  a
	      separate	message/rfc822	MIME  part  instead of included	in the
	      main body	of the message.	 This is useful	 for  forwarding  MIME
	      messages so the receiver can properly view the message as	it was
	      delivered	 to  you.  If  you like	to switch between MIME and not
	      MIME from	mail  to  mail,	 set  this  variable  to  "ask-no"  or
	      "ask-yes".

	      Also see $forward_decode and $mime_forward_decode.

       mime_forward_decode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls	the  decoding of complex MIME messages into text/plain
	      when forwarding a	message	while $mime_forward is set.  Otherwise
	      $forward_decode is used instead.

       mime_forward_rest
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      When  forwarding multiple	attachments of a MIME message from the
	      attachment menu, attachments which cannot	be decoded in  a  rea-
	      sonable manner will be attached to the newly composed message if
	      this option is set.

       mime_type_query_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This specifies a command to run, to determine the	mime type of a
	      new    attachment	   when	   composing	a   message.	Unless
	      $mime_type_query_first is	set, this will only be run if the  at-
	      tachment's extension is not found	in the mime.types file.

	      The  string  may	contain	a "%s",	which will be substituted with
	      the attachment filename.	Mutt will add quotes around the	string
	      substituted for "%s" automatically according  to	shell  quoting
	      rules, so	you should avoid adding	your own.  If no "%s" is found
	      in  the  string, Mutt will append	the attachment filename	to the
	      end of the string.

	      The command should output	a single line containing  the  attach-
	      ment's mime type.

	      Suggested	values are "xdg-mime query filetype" or	"file -bi".

       mime_type_query_first
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  the  $mime_type_query_command	will be	run before the
	      mime.types lookup.

       mix_entry_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%4n %c %-16s %a"

	      This variable describes the format of a  remailer	 line  on  the
	      mixmaster	 chain selection screen.  The following	printf(3)-like
	      sequences	are supported:
	      %n     The running number	on the menu.
	      %c     Remailer capabilities.
	      %s     The remailer's short name.
	      %a     The remailer's e-mail address.

	      (Mixmaster only)

       mixmaster
	      Type: path
	      Default: "mixmaster"

	      This variable contains the path to the Mixmaster binary on  your
	      system.	It  is	used with various sets of parameters to	gather
	      the list of known	remailers,  and	 to  finally  send  a  message
	      through the mixmaster chain. (Mixmaster only)

       move
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: no

	      Controls	whether	 or not	Mutt will move read messages from your
	      spool mailbox to your $mbox mailbox, or as a result of a	"mbox-
	      hook" command.

       muttlisp_inline_eval
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set,	Mutt  will evaluate bare parenthesis arguments to com-
	      mands as MuttLisp	expressions.

       narrow_tree
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This variable, when set, makes the thread	tree narrower,	allow-
	      ing deeper threads to fit	on the screen.

       net_inc
	      Type: number
	      Default: 10

	      Operations  that	expect to transfer a large amount of data over
	      the network will update their progress every $net_inc kilobytes.
	      If set to	0, no progress messages	will be	displayed.

	      See also $read_inc, $write_inc and $net_inc.

       new_mail_command
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      If set, Mutt will	call this command after	a new message  is  re-
	      ceived.	See  the  $status_format  documentation	for the	values
	      that can be formatted into this command.

       pager
	      Type: path
	      Default: "builtin"

	      This variable specifies which pager you would  like  to  use  to
	      view  messages.  The  value  "builtin" means to use the built-in
	      pager, otherwise this variable should specify  the  pathname  of
	      the external pager you would like	to use.

	      The  string  may	contain	a "%s",	which will be substituted with
	      the generated message filename.  Mutt will add quotes around the
	      string substituted for "%s"  automatically  according  to	 shell
	      quoting  rules, so you should avoid adding your own.  If no "%s"
	      is found in the string, Mutt will	append the message filename to
	      the end of the string.

	      Using an external	pager may have some disadvantages:  Additional
	      keystrokes  are  necessary because you can't call	mutt functions
	      directly from the	pager, and screen resizes cause	 lines	longer
	      than the screen width to be badly	formatted in the help menu.

	      When  using  an external pager, also see $prompt_after which de-
	      faults set.

       pager_context
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      This variable controls the number	of lines of context  that  are
	      given  when displaying the next or previous page in the internal
	      pager.  By default, Mutt will display the	line  after  the  last
	      one  on  the screen at the top of	the next page (0 lines of con-
	      text).

	      This variable also specifies the amount  of  context  given  for
	      search  results.	If positive, this many lines will be given be-
	      fore a match, if 0, the match will be top-aligned.

       pager_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "-%Z- %C/%m: %-20.20n   %s%*  --	(%P)"

	      This variable controls the format	of the one-line	message	 "sta-
	      tus"  displayed before each message in either the	internal or an
	      external pager.  The valid sequences  are	 listed	 in  the  $in-
	      dex_format section.

       pager_index_lines
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      Determines  the  number  of lines	of a mini-index	which is shown
	      when in the pager.  The current message, unless near the top  or
	      bottom  of the folder, will be roughly one third of the way down
	      this mini-index, giving the reader the context of	a few messages
	      before and after the message.  This is useful, for  example,  to
	      determine	 how  many  messages  remain to	be read	in the current
	      thread.  One of the lines	is reserved for	the  status  bar  from
	      the  index,  so a	setting	of 6 will only show 5 lines of the ac-
	      tual index.  A value of 0	results	in no index being  shown.   If
	      the  number  of  messages	 in  the  current  folder is less than
	      $pager_index_lines, then the index will only use as  many	 lines
	      as it needs.

       pager_skip_quoted_context
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      Determines the number of lines of	context	to show	before the un-
	      quoted  text  when  using	 <skip-quoted>.	When set to a positive
	      number at	most that many lines of	the previous  quote  are  dis-
	      played. If the previous quote is shorter the whole quote is dis-
	      played.

       pager_stop
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  the internal-pager will not move to the next message
	      when you are at the end of a message and invoke the  <next-page>
	      function.

       pattern_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%2n %-15e  %d"

	      This  variable  describes	the format of the "pattern completion"
	      menu. The	following printf(3)-style sequences are	understood:
	      %d     pattern description
	      %e     pattern expression
	      %n     index number

       pgp_auto_decode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, mutt will	automatically attempt to  decrypt  traditional
	      PGP messages whenever the	user performs an operation which ordi-
	      narily  would  result in the contents of the message being oper-
	      ated on.	For example, if	the user  displays  a  pgp-traditional
	      message which has	not been manually checked with the <check-tra-
	      ditional-pgp>  function,	mutt will automatically	check the mes-
	      sage for traditional pgp.

       pgp_autoinline
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This option controls whether  Mutt  generates  old-style	inline
	      (traditional)  PGP  encrypted  or	 signed	messages under certain
	      circumstances.  This can be overridden by	use of the  pgp	 menu,
	      when inline is not required.  The	GPGME backend does not support
	      this option.

	      Note  that  Mutt	might  automatically use PGP/MIME for messages
	      which consist of more than a single MIME part.  Mutt can be con-
	      figured to ask before  sending  PGP/MIME	messages  when	inline
	      (traditional) would not work.

	      Also see the $pgp_mime_auto variable.

	      Also  note  that	using  the  old-style  PGP  message  format is
	      strongly deprecated.  (PGP only)

       pgp_check_exit
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, mutt will	check the exit code of the PGP subprocess when
	      signing or encrypting.  A	non-zero exit code means that the sub-
	      process failed.  (PGP only)

       pgp_check_gpg_decrypt_status_fd
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, mutt will	check the status  file	descriptor  output  of
	      $pgp_decrypt_command  and	 $pgp_decode_command  for GnuPG	status
	      codes indicating successful decryption.  This will check for the
	      presence of DECRYPTION_OKAY, absence of  DECRYPTION_FAILED,  and
	      that  all	 PLAINTEXT  occurs  between  the  BEGIN_DECRYPTION and
	      END_DECRYPTION status codes.

	      If unset,	mutt will instead match	the status fd  output  against
	      $pgp_decryption_okay.  (PGP only)

       pgp_clearsign_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  format  is	used  to create	an old-style "clearsigned" PGP
	      message.	Note that the use of this format  is  strongly	depre-
	      cated.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_decode_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  format strings specifies a command which is	used to	decode
	      application/pgp attachments.

	      The PGP command formats have their own set of printf(3)-like se-
	      quences:
	      %p     Expands to	PGPPASSFD=0 when a pass	phrase is  needed,  to
		     an	 empty string otherwise. Note: This may	be used	with a
		     %?	construct.
	      %f     Expands to	the name of a file containing a	message.
	      %s     Expands to	the name of a file  containing	the  signature
		     part
				of  a multipart/signed attachment when verify-
		     ing it.
	      %a     The value of $pgp_sign_as if set, otherwise the value  of
		     $pgp_default_key.
	      %r     One or more key IDs (or fingerprints if available).

	      For  examples  on	how to configure these formats for the various
	      versions of PGP which are	floating around, see the pgp  and  gpg
	      sample  configuration  files  in the samples/ subdirectory which
	      has been installed on your system	alongside  the	documentation.
	      (PGP only)

       pgp_decrypt_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to decrypt a	PGP encrypted message.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_decryption_okay
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: ""

	      If  you assign text to this variable, then an encrypted PGP mes-
	      sage is only considered successfully  decrypted  if  the	output
	      from  $pgp_decrypt_command  contains  the	text.  This is used to
	      protect against a	spoofed	encrypted message, with	 multipart/en-
	      crypted  headers but containing a	block that is not actually en-
	      crypted.	(e.g. simply signed and	ascii armored text).

	      Note that	if $pgp_check_gpg_decrypt_status_fd is set, this vari-
	      able is ignored.	(PGP only)

       pgp_default_key
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This is the default key-pair to use for PGP operations.  It will
	      be used for encryption (see $postpone_encrypt and	 $pgp_self_en-
	      crypt).

	      It will also be used for signing unless $pgp_sign_as is set.

	      The  (now	 deprecated)  pgp_self_encrypt_as is an	alias for this
	      variable,	and should no longer be	used.  (PGP only)

       pgp_encrypt_only_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to encrypt a	body part without signing it.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_encrypt_sign_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to both sign	and encrypt a body part.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_entry_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%4n %t%f %4l/0x%k %-4a %2c %u"

	      This variable allows you to customize the	PGP key	selection menu
	      to your personal taste. This string is similar to	$index_format,
	      but has its own set of printf(3)-like sequences:
	      %n     number
	      %k     key id
	      %u     user id
	      %a     algorithm
	      %l     key length
	      %f     flags
	      %c     capabilities
	      %t     trust/validity of the key-uid association
	      %[<s>] date of the key where <s> is an strftime(3) expression

	      (PGP only)

       pgp_export_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to export a public key from the user's  key
	      ring.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_getkeys_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command is invoked whenever	Mutt needs to fetch the	public
	      key associated with an email address.   Of  the  sequences  sup-
	      ported by	$pgp_decode_command, %r	is the only printf(3)-like se-
	      quence  used  with  this format.	Note that in this case,	%r ex-
	      pands to the email address, not the public key ID	(the key ID is
	      unknown, which is	why Mutt  is  invoking	this  command).	  (PGP
	      only)

       pgp_good_sign
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: ""

	      If  you  assign a	text to	this variable, then a PGP signature is
	      only considered verified if the output from  $pgp_verify_command
	      contains	the  text. Use this variable if	the exit code from the
	      command is 0 even	for bad	signatures.  (PGP only)

       pgp_ignore_subkeys
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Setting this variable will cause Mutt to ignore OpenPGP subkeys.
	      Instead, the principal key will inherit the  subkeys'  capabili-
	      ties.   Unset this if you	want to	play interesting key selection
	      games.  (PGP only)

       pgp_import_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to import a key from	 a  message  into  the
	      user's public key	ring.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_list_pubring_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command  is	 used  to list the public key ring's contents.
	      The output format	must be	analogous to the one used by

	      gpg --list-keys --with-colons --with-fingerprint

	      This format is also generated by the mutt_pgpring	utility	 which
	      comes with mutt.

	      Note:  gpg's fixed-list-mode option should not be	used.  It pro-
	      duces a different	date format which may result in	 mutt  showing
	      incorrect	key generation dates.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible	printf(3)-like	sequences.  Note that in this case, %r
	      expands to the search string, which is a list  of	 one  or  more
	      quoted values such as email address, name, or keyid.  (PGP only)

       pgp_list_secring_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command  is	 used  to list the secret key ring's contents.
	      The output format	must be	analogous to the one used by:

	      gpg --list-keys --with-colons --with-fingerprint

	      This format is also generated by the mutt_pgpring	utility	 which
	      comes with mutt.

	      Note:  gpg's fixed-list-mode option should not be	used.  It pro-
	      duces a different	date format which may result in	 mutt  showing
	      incorrect	key generation dates.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible	printf(3)-like	sequences.  Note that in this case, %r
	      expands to the search string, which is a list  of	 one  or  more
	      quoted values such as email address, name, or keyid.  (PGP only)

       pgp_long_ids
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set,	use 64 bit PGP key IDs,	if unset use the normal	32 bit
	      key IDs.	NOTE: Internally, Mutt has transitioned	to using  fin-
	      gerprints	(or long key IDs as a fallback).  This option now only
	      controls	the display of key IDs in the key selection menu and a
	      few other	places.	 (PGP only)

       pgp_mime_auto
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      This option controls whether Mutt	will prompt you	for  automati-
	      cally  sending  a	(signed/encrypted) message using PGP/MIME when
	      inline (traditional) fails (for any reason).

	      Also note	 that  using  the  old-style  PGP  message  format  is
	      strongly deprecated.  (PGP only)

       pgp_replyinline
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Setting  this variable will cause	Mutt to	always attempt to cre-
	      ate an inline (traditional) message when replying	to  a  message
	      which is PGP encrypted/signed inline.  This can be overridden by
	      use  of  the pgp menu, when inline is not	required.  This	option
	      does not automatically detect if the (replied-to)	message	is in-
	      line;  instead  it  relies  on  Mutt  internals  for  previously
	      checked/flagged messages.

	      Note  that  Mutt	might  automatically use PGP/MIME for messages
	      which consist of more than a single MIME part.  Mutt can be con-
	      figured to ask before  sending  PGP/MIME	messages  when	inline
	      (traditional) would not work.

	      Also see the $pgp_mime_auto variable.

	      Also  note  that	using  the  old-style  PGP  message  format is
	      strongly deprecated.  (PGP only)

       pgp_retainable_sigs
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, signed and encrypted messages  will  consist  of	nested
	      multipart/signed and multipart/encrypted body parts.

	      This  is useful for applications like encrypted and signed mail-
	      ing lists, where the outer layer	(multipart/encrypted)  can  be
	      easily  removed,	while  the  inner multipart/signed part	is re-
	      tained.  (PGP only)

       pgp_self_encrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	PGP encrypted messages will also  be  encrypted	 using
	      the key in $pgp_default_key.  (PGP only)

       pgp_show_unusable
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set, mutt will display non-usable keys on the	PGP key	selec-
	      tion menu.  This includes	keys which have	been revoked, have ex-
	      pired, or	have been marked as  "disabled"	 by  the  user.	  (PGP
	      only)

       pgp_sign_as
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      If  you have a different key pair	to use for signing, you	should
	      set this to the signing key.  Most people	will only need to  set
	      $pgp_default_key.	 It is recommended that	you use	the keyid form
	      to specify your key (e.g.	0x00112233).  (PGP only)

       pgp_sign_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command is used to create the detached PGP signature for a
	      multipart/signed PGP/MIME	body part.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_sort_keys
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: address

	      Specifies	how the	entries	in the pgp menu	are sorted.  The  fol-
	      lowing are legal values:
	      address
		     sort alphabetically by user id
	      keyid  sort alphabetically by key	id
	      date   sort by key creation date
	      trust  sort by the trust of the key

	      If  you prefer reverse order of the above	values,	prefix it with
	      "reverse-".  (PGP	only)

       pgp_strict_enc
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, Mutt will	automatically encode PGP/MIME signed  messages
	      as  quoted-printable.   Please note that unsetting this variable
	      may lead to problems with	non-verifyable PGP signatures, so only
	      change this if you know what you are doing.  (PGP	only)

       pgp_timeout
	      Type: number (long)
	      Default: 300

	      The number of seconds after which	a cached passphrase  will  ex-
	      pire if not used.	 (PGP only)

       pgp_use_gpg_agent
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set, mutt expects a gpg-agent(1) process will	handle private
	      key passphrase prompts.  If unset,  mutt	will  prompt  for  the
	      passphrase and pass it via stdin to the pgp command.

	      Note that	as of version 2.1, GnuPG automatically spawns an agent
	      and requires the agent be	used for passphrase management.	 Since
	      that  version  is	 increasingly prevalent, this variable now de-
	      faults set.

	      Mutt works with a	GUI or curses pinentry program.	 A TTY	pinen-
	      try should not be	used.

	      If you are using an older	version	of GnuPG without an agent run-
	      ning,  or	 another encryption program without an agent, you will
	      need to unset this variable.  (PGP only)

       pgp_verify_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to verify PGP signatures.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pgp_verify_key_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to verify key information from the key  se-
	      lection menu.

	      This is a	format string, see the $pgp_decode_command command for
	      possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (PGP only)

       pipe_decode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Used  in	connection with	the <pipe-message> function.  When un-
	      set, Mutt	will pipe the messages without any preprocessing. When
	      set, Mutt	will attempt to	decode the messages first.

	      Also see $pipe_decode_weed, which	controls whether headers  will
	      be weeded	when this is set.

       pipe_decode_weed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      For  <pipe-message>, when	$pipe_decode is	set, this further con-
	      trols whether Mutt will weed headers.

       pipe_sep
	      Type: string
	      Default: "\n"

	      The separator to add between messages  when  piping  a  list  of
	      tagged messages to an external Unix command.

       pipe_split
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Used  in	connection  with the <pipe-message> function following
	      <tag-prefix>.  If	this variable is unset,	when piping a list  of
	      tagged messages Mutt will	concatenate the	messages and will pipe
	      them  all	 concatenated.	 When set, Mutt	will pipe the messages
	      one by one.  In both cases the messages are piped	in the current
	      sorted order, and	the $pipe_sep separator	is  added  after  each
	      message.

       pop_auth_try_all
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set,	Mutt  will  try	 all available authentication methods.
	      When unset, Mutt will only fall  back  to	 other	authentication
	      methods  if the previous methods are unavailable.	If a method is
	      available	but authentication fails, Mutt will not	connect	to the
	      POP server.

       pop_authenticators
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This is a	colon-delimited	list of	 authentication	 methods  mutt
	      may attempt to use to log	in to an POP server, in	the order mutt
	      should  try  them.   Authentication  methods  are	either "user",
	      "apop" or	any SASL mechanism,  e.g.  "digest-md5",  "gssapi"  or
	      "cram-md5".   This option	is case-insensitive. If	this option is
	      unset (the default) mutt will try	all available methods, in  or-
	      der from most-secure to least-secure.

	      Example:

	      set pop_authenticators="digest-md5:apop:user"

       pop_checkinterval
	      Type: number
	      Default: 60

	      This variable configures how often (in seconds) mutt should look
	      for  new	mail  in the currently selected	mailbox	if it is a POP
	      mailbox.

       pop_delete
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-no

	      If set, Mutt will	delete successfully downloaded	messages  from
	      the  POP	server when using the <fetch-mail> function.  When un-
	      set, Mutt	will download messages but also	leave them on the  POP
	      server.

       pop_host
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      The  name	of your	POP server for the <fetch-mail>	function.  You
	      can also specify an alternative  port,  username	and  password,
	      i.e.:

	      [pop[s]://][username[:password]@]popserver[:port]

	      where "[...]" denotes an optional	part.

       pop_last
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  this	variable  is  set, mutt	will try to use	the "LAST" POP
	      command for retrieving only unread messages from the POP	server
	      when using the <fetch-mail> function.

       pop_oauth_refresh_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      The command to run to generate an	OAUTH refresh token for	autho-
	      rizing your connection to	your POP server.  This command will be
	      run  on  every  connection attempt that uses the OAUTHBEARER au-
	      thentication mechanism.  See "oauth" for details.

       pop_pass
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Specifies	the password for your POP  account.   If  unset,  Mutt
	      will prompt you for your password	when you open a	POP mailbox.

	      Warning:	you  should  only  use	this  option when you are on a
	      fairly secure machine, because the superuser can read your  mut-
	      trc even if you are the only one who can read the	file.

       pop_reconnect
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      Controls	whether	 or  not Mutt will try to reconnect to the POP
	      server if	the connection is lost.

       pop_user
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Your login name on the POP server.

	      This variable defaults to	your user name on the local machine.

       post_indent_string
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Similar to the $attribution  variable,  Mutt  will  append  this
	      string  after  the inclusion of a	message	which is being replied
	      to.  For a full listing of defined printf(3)-like	sequences  see
	      the section on $index_format.

       postpone
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      Controls	whether	 or  not  messages are saved in	the $postponed
	      mailbox when you elect not to send immediately.

	      Also see the $recall variable.

       postponed
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/postponed"

	      Mutt allows you to indefinitely  "postpone  sending  a  message"
	      which  you  are editing.	When you choose	to postpone a message,
	      Mutt saves it in the mailbox specified by	this variable.

	      Also see the $postpone variable.

       postpone_encrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	postponed messages that	are marked for encryption will
	      be self-encrypted.  Mutt will first try  to  encrypt  using  the
	      value  specified	in $pgp_default_key or $smime_default_key.  If
	      those are	not set, it  will  try	the  deprecated	 $postpone_en-
	      crypt_as.	 (Crypto only)

       postpone_encrypt_as
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  is	a deprecated fall-back variable	for $postpone_encrypt.
	      Please  use  $pgp_default_key  or	 $smime_default_key.   (Crypto
	      only)

       preconnect
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      If  set,	a shell	command	to be executed if mutt fails to	estab-
	      lish a connection	to the server. This is useful for  setting  up
	      secure  connections,  e.g. with ssh(1). If the command returns a
	      nonzero status, mutt gives up opening the	server.	Example:

	      set preconnect="ssh -f -q	-L 1234:mailhost.net:143 mailhost.net \
	      sleep 20 < /dev/null > /dev/null"

	      Mailbox "foo" on "mailhost.net" can now be reached  as  "{local-
	      host:1234}foo".

	      Note:  For  this	example	to work, you must be able to log in to
	      the remote machine without having	to enter a password.

       print
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-no

	      Controls whether or not Mutt really prints  messages.   This  is
	      set to "ask-no" by default, because some people accidentally hit
	      "p" often.

       print_command
	      Type: path
	      Default: "lpr"

	      This  specifies  the  command  pipe that should be used to print
	      messages.

       print_decode
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Used in connection with the <print-message> function.   If  this
	      option is	set, the message is decoded before it is passed	to the
	      external command specified by $print_command.  If	this option is
	      unset,  no processing will be applied to the message when	print-
	      ing it.  The latter setting may be useful	if you are using  some
	      advanced	printer	filter which is	able to	properly format	e-mail
	      messages for printing.

	      Also see $print_decode_weed, which controls whether headers will
	      be weeded	when this is set.

       print_decode_weed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      For <print-message>, when	$print_decode  is  set,	 this  further
	      controls whether Mutt will weed headers.

       print_split
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Used  in	connection with	the <print-message> function.  If this
	      option is	set, the command specified by $print_command  is  exe-
	      cuted once for each message which	is to be printed.  If this op-
	      tion  is	unset, the command specified by	$print_command is exe-
	      cuted only once, and all the messages are	concatenated,  with  a
	      form feed	as the message separator.

	      Those  who use the enscript(1) program's mail-printing mode will
	      most likely want to set this option.

       prompt_after
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If you use an external $pager, setting this variable will	 cause
	      Mutt  to	prompt	you  for a command when	the pager exits	rather
	      than returning to	the index menu.	 If unset, Mutt	will return to
	      the index	menu when the external pager exits.

       query_command
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This specifies the command Mutt will use to  make	 external  ad-
	      dress  queries.	The  string  may contain a "%s", which will be
	      substituted with the query string	the user types.	 Mutt will add
	      quotes around the	string substituted for "%s" automatically  ac-
	      cording  to shell	quoting	rules, so you should avoid adding your
	      own.  If no "%s" is found	in the string, Mutt  will  append  the
	      user's query to the end of the string.  See "query" for more in-
	      formation.

       query_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%4c %t %-25.25a	%-25.25n %?e?(%e)?"

	      This variable describes the format of the	"query"	menu. The fol-
	      lowing printf(3)-style sequences are understood:
	      %a     destination address
	      %c     current entry number
	      %e     extra information *
	      %n     destination name
	      %t     "*" if current entry is tagged, a space otherwise
	      %>X    right justify the rest of the string and pad with "X"
	      %|X    pad to the	end of the line	with "X"
	      %*X    soft-fill with character "X" as pad

	      For  an  explanation of "soft-fill", see the $index_format docu-
	      mentation.

	      *	= can be optionally printed if nonzero,	see the	$status_format
	      documentation.

       quit
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      This variable controls whether "quit" and	"exit"	actually  quit
	      from mutt.  If this option is set, they do quit, if it is	unset,
	      they  have no effect, and	if it is set to	ask-yes	or ask-no, you
	      are prompted for confirmation when you try to quit.

       quote_regexp
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: "^([ \t]*[|>:}#])+"

	      A	regular	expression used	in the	internal  pager	 to  determine
	      quoted  sections	of  text in the	body of	a message. Quoted text
	      may be filtered out using	the <toggle-quoted> command,  or  col-
	      ored according to	the "color quoted" family of directives.

	      Higher  levels  of  quoting  may	be colored differently ("color
	      quoted1",	"color quoted2", etc.).	The quoting  level  is	deter-
	      mined  by	 removing the last character from the matched text and
	      recursively reapplying the regular expression until it fails  to
	      produce a	match.

	      Match  detection	may  be	overridden by the $smileys regular ex-
	      pression.

       read_inc
	      Type: number
	      Default: 10

	      If set to	a value	greater	than 0,	Mutt will display  which  mes-
	      sage  it is currently on when reading a mailbox or when perform-
	      ing search actions such as search	 and  limit.  The  message  is
	      printed  after  this  many  messages  have been read or searched
	      (e.g., if	set to 25, Mutt	will print a message  when  it	is  at
	      message  25,  and	 then again when it gets to message 50).  This
	      variable is meant	to indicate progress when reading or searching
	      large mailboxes which may	take some time.	 When set to 0,	only a
	      single message will appear before	the reading the	mailbox.

	      Also see the $write_inc, $net_inc	and  $time_inc	variables  and
	      the  "tuning"  section  of the manual for	performance considera-
	      tions.

       read_only
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, all folders are opened in	read-only mode.

       realname
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This variable specifies what "real" or "personal"	name should be
	      used when	sending	messages.

	      By default, this is the GECOS field from /etc/passwd.  Note that
	      this variable will not be	used when the user has set a real name
	      in the $from variable.

       recall
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      Controls whether or not Mutt  recalls  postponed	messages  when
	      composing	a new message.

	      Setting  this  variable to yes is	not generally useful, and thus
	      not recommended.	Note that the <recall-message> function	can be
	      used to manually recall postponed	messages.

	      Also see $postponed variable.

       record
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/sent"

	      This specifies the file into which your outgoing messages	should
	      be appended.  (This is meant as the primary method for saving  a
	      copy  of	your messages, but another way to do this is using the
	      "my_hdr" command to create a "Bcc:" field	with  your  email  ad-
	      dress in it.)

	      The  value  of  $record  is  overridden  by  the $force_name and
	      $save_name variables, and	 the  "fcc-hook"  command.   Also  see
	      $copy and	$write_bcc.

	      Multiple	mailboxes may be specified if $fcc_delimiter is	set to
	      a	string delimiter.

       reflow_space_quotes
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This option controls how quotes from format=flowed messages  are
	      displayed	 in the	pager and when replying	(with $text_flowed un-
	      set).  When set, this option adds	spaces	after  each  level  of
	      quote marks, turning ">>>foo" into "> > >	foo".

	      Note:  If	 $reflow_text  is  unset,  this	 option	has no effect.
	      Also, this option	does not affect	replies	when  $text_flowed  is
	      set.

       reflow_text
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set,  Mutt	will  reformat	paragraphs in text/plain parts
	      marked format=flowed.  If	unset, Mutt  will  display  paragraphs
	      unaltered	from how they appear in	the message body.  See RFC3676
	      for details on the format=flowed format.

	      Also see $reflow_wrap, and $wrap.

       reflow_wrap
	      Type: number
	      Default: 78

	      This  variable  controls the maximum paragraph width when	refor-
	      matting text/plain parts when $reflow_text  is  set.   When  the
	      value  is	 0, paragraphs will be wrapped at the terminal's right
	      margin.  A positive value	sets the paragraph width  relative  to
	      the left margin.	A negative value set the paragraph width rela-
	      tive to the right	margin.

	      Also see $wrap.

       reply_regexp
	      Type: regular expression (localized)
	      Default: "^(re)(\[[0-9]+\])*:[ \t]*"

	      A	 regular  expression  used  to	recognize  reply messages when
	      threading	and replying. The default  value  corresponds  to  the
	      standard Latin "Re:" prefix.

	      This  value  may	have been localized by the translator for your
	      locale, adding other prefixes that are common in the locale. You
	      can add your own prefixes	by appending inside "^(re)".  For  ex-
	      ample: "^(re|se)"	or "^(re|aw|se)".

	      The  second parenthesized	expression matches zero	or more	brack-
	      eted numbers following the prefix, such as "Re[1]: ".  The  ini-
	      tial  "\\["  means  a  literal left-bracket character.  Note the
	      backslash	must be	doubled	 when  used  inside  a	double	quoted
	      string  in  the  muttrc.	 "[0-9]+"  means  one or more numbers.
	      "\\]" means a literal right-bracket.  Finally the	 whole	paren-
	      thesized	expression has a "*" suffix, meaning it	can occur zero
	      or more times.

	      The last part matches a colon followed by	an optional  space  or
	      tab.   Note  "\t"	 is converted to a literal tab inside a	double
	      quoted string.  If you use a single  quoted  string,  you	 would
	      have  to type an actual tab character, and would need to convert
	      the double-backslashes to	single backslashes.

	      Note: the	result of this regexp match  against  the  subject  is
	      stored  in the header cache.  Mutt isn't smart enough to invali-
	      date a header cache entry	based on changing $reply_regexp, so if
	      you aren't seeing	correct	values in the index,  try  temporarily
	      turning  off  the	header cache.  If that fixes the problem, then
	      once the variable	is set	to  your  liking,  remove  your	 stale
	      header cache files and turn the header cache back	on.

       reply_self
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  unset	 and  you  are replying	to a message sent by you, Mutt
	      will assume that you want	to reply to  the  recipients  of  that
	      message rather than to yourself.

	      Also see the "alternates"	command.

       reply_to
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: ask-yes

	      If  set,	when  replying to a message, Mutt will use the address
	      listed in	the Reply-to: header as	the recipient  of  the	reply.
	      If  unset, it will use the address in the	From: header field in-
	      stead.  This option is useful for	reading	a  mailing  list  that
	      sets the Reply-To: header	field to the list address and you want
	      to send a	private	message	to the author of a message.

       resolve
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When  set, the cursor will be automatically advanced to the next
	      (possibly	undeleted) message whenever a  command	that  modifies
	      the current message is executed.

       resume_draft_files
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set,	draft  files (specified	by -H on the command line) are
	      processed	similarly to when resuming a postponed	message.   Re-
	      cipients	are not	prompted for; send-hooks are not evaluated; no
	      alias expansion takes place; user-defined	headers	and signatures
	      are not added to the message.

       resume_edited_draft_files
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, draft files previously edited (via -E -H on the  command
	      line)  will have $resume_draft_files automatically set when they
	      are used as a draft file again.

	      The first	time a draft file is saved, mutt will  add  a  header,
	      X-Mutt-Resume-Draft  to the saved	file.  The next	time the draft
	      file is read in, if mutt sees  the  header,  it  will  set  $re-
	      sume_draft_files.

	      This option is designed to prevent multiple signatures, user-de-
	      fined headers, and other processing effects from being made mul-
	      tiple times to the draft file.

       reverse_alias
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This  variable  controls	whether	 or  not Mutt will display the
	      "personal" name from your	aliases	in the index menu if it	 finds
	      an alias that matches the	message's sender.  For example,	if you
	      have the following alias:

	      alias juser abd30425@somewhere.net (Joe User)

	      and then you receive mail	which contains the following header:

	      From: abd30425@somewhere.net

	      It would be displayed in the index menu as "Joe User" instead of
	      "abd30425@somewhere.net."	  This	is  useful  when  the person's
	      e-mail address is	not human friendly.

       reverse_name
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      It may sometimes arrive that you receive mail to a  certain  ma-
	      chine,  move  the	messages to another machine, and reply to some
	      the messages from	there.	If this	variable is set,  the  default
	      From:  line  of  the  reply  messages is built using the address
	      where you	received the messages you are replying to if that  ad-
	      dress  matches  your "alternates".  If the variable is unset, or
	      the address that would be	used doesn't match your	 "alternates",
	      the From:	line will use your address on the current machine.

	      Also see the "alternates"	command	and $reverse_realname.

       reverse_realname
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This  variable fine-tunes	the behavior of	the $reverse_name fea-
	      ture.

	      When it is unset,	Mutt will remove  the  real  name  part	 of  a
	      matching	address.   This	 allows	 the  use of the email address
	      without having to	also use what the sender put in	the real  name
	      field.

	      When it is set, Mutt will	use the	matching address as-is.

	      In either	case, a	missing	real name will be filled in afterwards
	      using the	value of $realname.

       rfc2047_parameters
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When this	variable is set, Mutt will decode RFC2047-encoded MIME
	      parameters. You want to set this variable	when mutt suggests you
	      to save attachments to files named like:

	      =?iso-8859-1?Q?file=5F=E4=5F991116=2Ezip?=

	      When this	variable is set	interactively, the change won't	be ac-
	      tive until you change folders.

	      Note  that  this use of RFC2047's	encoding is explicitly prohib-
	      ited by the standard, but	nevertheless encountered in the	wild.

	      Also note	that setting this parameter will not have  the	effect
	      that  mutt  generates this kind of encoding.  Instead, mutt will
	      unconditionally use the encoding specified in RFC2231.

       save_address
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, mutt will	take the sender's full address when choosing a
	      default folder for saving	a mail.	If $save_name  or  $force_name
	      is  set  too, the	selection of the Fcc folder will be changed as
	      well.

       save_empty
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When unset, mailboxes which contain no saved  messages  will  be
	      removed  when closed (the	exception is $spoolfile	which is never
	      removed).	 If set, mailboxes are never removed.

	      Note: This only applies to mbox and MMDF folders,	Mutt does  not
	      delete MH	and Maildir directories.

       save_history
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      This  variable  controls	the size of the	history	(per category)
	      saved in the $history_file file.

       save_name
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This variable controls  how  copies  of  outgoing	 messages  are
	      saved.   When set, a check is made to see	if a mailbox specified
	      by the recipient address exists (this is done by searching for a
	      mailbox in the $folder directory with the	username part  of  the
	      recipient	address).  If the mailbox exists, the outgoing message
	      will be saved to that mailbox, otherwise the message is saved to
	      the $record mailbox.

	      Also see the $force_name variable.

       score
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When this	variable is unset, scoring is turned off.  This	can be
	      useful  to  selectively disable scoring for certain folders when
	      the $score_threshold_delete variable and related are used.

       score_threshold_delete
	      Type: number
	      Default: -1

	      Messages which have been assigned	a score	equal to or lower than
	      the value	of this	variable are automatically marked for deletion
	      by mutt.	Since mutt scores are always greater than or equal  to
	      zero,  the  default  setting  of this variable will never	mark a
	      message for deletion.

       score_threshold_flag
	      Type: number
	      Default: 9999

	      Messages which have been assigned	a score	greater	than or	 equal
	      to this variable's value are automatically marked	"flagged".

       score_threshold_read
	      Type: number
	      Default: -1

	      Messages which have been assigned	a score	equal to or lower than
	      the  value  of this variable are automatically marked as read by
	      mutt.  Since mutt	scores are always greater  than	 or  equal  to
	      zero,  the  default  setting  of this variable will never	mark a
	      message read.

       search_context
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      For the pager, this variable specifies the number	of lines shown
	      before search  results.  By  default,  search  results  will  be
	      top-aligned.

       send_charset
	      Type: string
	      Default: "us-ascii:iso-8859-1:utf-8"

	      A	 colon-delimited list of character sets	for outgoing messages.
	      Mutt will	use the	first character	set into which the text	can be
	      converted	exactly.  If your $charset is not "iso-8859-1" and re-
	      cipients may not understand "UTF-8", it is advisable to  include
	      in  the  list  an	appropriate widely used	standard character set
	      (such as "iso-8859-2", "koi8-r" or "iso-2022-jp")	either instead
	      of or after "iso-8859-1".

	      In case the text cannot be converted into	one of these  exactly,
	      mutt uses	$charset as a fallback.

       send_multipart_alternative
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: no

	      If set, Mutt will	generate a multipart/alternative container and
	      an  alternative  part  using  the	 filter	 script	 specified  in
	      $send_multipart_alternative_filter.  See the section "MIME  Mul-
	      tipart/Alternative" (alternative-order).

	      Note  that enabling multipart/alternative	is not compatible with
	      inline PGP encryption.  Mutt will	prompt to use PGP/MIME in that
	      case.

       send_multipart_alternative_filter
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This specifies a filter script,  which  will  convert  the  main
	      (composed)  message  of the email	to an alternative format.  The
	      message will be piped to the filter's stdin.  The	expected  out-
	      put  of  the  filter is the generated mime type, e.g. text/html,
	      followed by a blank line,	and then the converted	content.   See
	      the section "MIME	Multipart/Alternative" (alternative-order).

       sendmail
	      Type: path
	      Default: "/usr/sbin/sendmail -oem	-oi"

	      Specifies	the program and	arguments used to deliver mail sent by
	      Mutt.   Mutt expects that	the specified program interprets addi-
	      tional arguments as recipient addresses.	Mutt appends  all  re-
	      cipients	after  adding a	-- delimiter (if not already present).
	      Additional flags,	such as	for $use_8bitmime, $use_envelope_from,
	      $dsn_notify, or $dsn_return will be added	before the delimiter.

	      Note: This command is invoked differently	from most  other  com-
	      mands  in	 Mutt.	It is tokenized	by space, and invoked directly
	      via execvp(3) with an array of arguments - so commands or	 argu-
	      ments  with  spaces in them are not supported.  The shell	is not
	      used to run the command, so shell	quoting	is also	not supported.

	      See also:	$write_bcc.

       sendmail_wait
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      Specifies	the number  of	seconds	 to  wait  for	the  $sendmail
	      process  to  finish before giving	up and putting delivery	in the
	      background.

	      Mutt interprets the value	of this	variable as follows:
	      >0     number of seconds to wait for sendmail to	finish	before
		     continuing
	      0	     wait forever for sendmail to finish
	      <0     always put	sendmail in the	background without waiting

	      Note that	if you specify a value other than 0, the output	of the
	      child process will be put	in a temporary file.  If there is some
	      error, you will be informed as to	where to find the output.

       shell
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      Command to use when spawning a subshell.	By default, the	user's
	      login shell from /etc/passwd is used.

       sidebar_delim_chars
	      Type: string
	      Default: "/."

	      This  contains  the  list	 of characters which you would like to
	      treat as folder separators for displaying	paths in the sidebar.

	      Local mail is often arranged  in	directories:  `dir1/dir2/mail-
	      box'.

	      set sidebar_delim_chars='/'

	      IMAP mailboxes are often named: `folder1.folder2.mailbox'.

	      set sidebar_delim_chars='.'

	      See  also:  $sidebar_short_path,	$sidebar_folder_indent,	$side-
	      bar_indent_string.

       sidebar_divider_char
	      Type: string
	      Default: "|"

	      This specifies the characters to be drawn	 between  the  sidebar
	      (when  visible)  and  the	 other	Mutt panels. ASCII and Unicode
	      line-drawing characters are supported.

       sidebar_folder_indent
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Set this to indent mailboxes in the sidebar.

	      See also:	 $sidebar_short_path,  $sidebar_indent_string,	$side-
	      bar_delim_chars.

       sidebar_format
	      Type: string
	      Default: "%B%*  %n"

	      This  variable allows you	to customize the sidebar display. This
	      string is	similar	to $index_format,  but	has  its  own  set  of
	      printf(3)-like sequences:
	      %B     Name of the mailbox
	      %S     * Size of mailbox (total number of	messages)
	      %N     * Number of unread	messages in the	mailbox
	      %n     N if mailbox has new mail,	blank otherwise
	      %F     * Number of Flagged messages in the mailbox
	      %!     "!"  :  one flagged message; "!!" : two flagged messages;
		     "n!" : n flagged messages (for n >	2).  Otherwise	prints
		     nothing.
	      %d     * @ Number	of deleted messages
	      %L     * @ Number	of messages after limiting
	      %t     * @ Number	of tagged messages
	      %>X    right justify the rest of the string and pad with "X"
	      %|X    pad to the	end of the line	with "X"
	      %*X    soft-fill with character "X" as pad

	      *	 = Can be optionally printed if	nonzero	@ = Only applicable to
	      the current folder

	      In order to use %S, %N, %F, and %!,  $mail_check_stats  must  be
	      set.   When  thus	 set,  a  suggested  value  for	this option is
	      "%B%?F? [%F]?%* %?N?%N/?%S".

       sidebar_indent_string
	      Type: string
	      Default: "  "

	      This specifies the string	that is	used to	 indent	 mailboxes  in
	      the sidebar.  It defaults	to two spaces.

	      See  also:  $sidebar_short_path,	$sidebar_folder_indent,	$side-
	      bar_delim_chars.

       sidebar_new_mail_only
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	the sidebar will  only	display	 mailboxes  containing
	      new, or flagged, mail.

	      See also:	sidebar_whitelist.

       sidebar_next_new_wrap
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  the <sidebar-next-new> command will not stop and the
	      end of the list of mailboxes, but	wrap around to the  beginning.
	      The  <sidebar-prev-new>  command is similarly affected, wrapping
	      around to	the end	of the list.

       sidebar_relative_shortpath_indent
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	this option changes how	$sidebar_short_path and	$side-
	      bar_folder_indent	perform	shortening and indentation: both  will
	      look at the previous sidebar entries and shorten/indent relative
	      to the most recent parent.

	      An example of this option	set/unset for mailboxes	listed in this
	      order, with $sidebar_short_path=yes, $sidebar_folder_indent=yes,
	      and $sidebar_indent_string="":
	      mailbox
		     set unset
	      =a.b   =a.b b
	      =a.b.c.d
		     c.d d
	      =a.b.e e e

	      The second line illustrates most clearly.	 With this option set,
	      =a.b.c.d is shortened relative to	=a.b, becoming c.d; it is also
	      indented	one  place  relative  to =a.b.	With this option unset
	      =a.b.c.d is always shortened to the last part of the mailbox,  d
	      and  is  indented	 three places, with respect to $folder (repre-
	      sented by	'=').

	      When set,	the third line will also  be  indented	and  shortened
	      relative to the first line.

       sidebar_short_path
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      By default the sidebar will show the mailbox's path, relative to
	      the $folder variable. Setting sidebar_shortpath=yes will shorten
	      the names	relative to the	previous name. Here's an example:
	      shortpath=no
		     shortpath=yes    shortpath=yes,   folderindent=yes,   in-
		     dentstr=".."
	      fruit  fruit fruit
	      fruit.apple
		     apple ..apple
	      fruit.banana
		     banana ..banana
	      fruit.cherry
		     cherry ..cherry

	      See also:	$sidebar_delim_chars,  $sidebar_folder_indent,	$side-
	      bar_indent_string.

       sidebar_sort_method
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: unsorted

	      Specifies	 how  to  sort mailbox entries in the sidebar.	By de-
	      fault, the entries are sorted alphabetically.  Valid values:
	      -	alpha (alphabetically)
	      -	count (all message count)
	      -	flagged	(flagged message count)
	      -	name (alphabetically)
	      -	new (unread message count)
	      -	path (alphabetically)
	      -	unread (unread message count)
	      -	unsorted

	      You may optionally use the "reverse-" prefix to specify  reverse
	      sorting  order  (example:	 "set  sidebar_sort_method=reverse-al-
	      pha").

       sidebar_use_mailbox_shortcuts
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	sidebar	 mailboxes  will  be  displayed	 with  mailbox
	      shortcut prefixes	"=" or "~".

	      When  unset, the sidebar will trim off a matching	$folder	prefix
	      but otherwise not	use mailbox shortcuts.

       sidebar_visible
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This specifies whether or	not to show sidebar. The sidebar shows
	      a	list of	all your mailboxes.

	      See also:	$sidebar_format, $sidebar_width

       sidebar_width
	      Type: number
	      Default: 30

	      This controls the	width of  the  sidebar.	  It  is  measured  in
	      screen  columns.	For example: sidebar_width=20 could display 20
	      ASCII characters,	or 10 Chinese characters.

       sig_dashes
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, a	line containing	"-- " (note the	trailing  space)  will
	      be  inserted before your $signature.  It is strongly recommended
	      that you not unset this variable unless your signature  contains
	      just  your  name.	  The reason for this is because many software
	      packages use "-- \n" to detect  your  signature.	 For  example,
	      Mutt  has	 the ability to	highlight the signature	in a different
	      color in the built-in pager.

       sig_on_top
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, the signature will be included before any	quoted or for-
	      warded text.  It is strongly recommended that  you  do  not  set
	      this variable unless you really know what	you are	doing, and are
	      prepared to take some heat from netiquette guardians.

       signature
	      Type: path
	      Default: "~/.signature"

	      Specifies	 the  filename of your signature, which	is appended to
	      all outgoing messages.   If the filename ends with a pipe	("|"),
	      it is assumed that filename is a shell command and input	should
	      be read from its standard	output.

       simple_search
	      Type: string
	      Default: "~f %s |	~s %s"

	      Specifies	 how  Mutt  should  expand a simple search into	a real
	      search pattern.  A simple	search is one that  does  not  contain
	      any  of  the "~" pattern modifiers.  See "patterns" for more in-
	      formation	on search patterns.

	      For example, if you simply type  "joe"  at  a  search  or	 limit
	      prompt, Mutt will	automatically expand it	to the value specified
	      by  this	variable  by  replacing	"%s" with the supplied string.
	      For the default value, "joe" would be expanded to: "~f joe |  ~s
	      joe".

       size_show_bytes
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set, message sizes will display bytes	for values less	than 1
	      kilobyte.	 See formatstrings-size.

       size_show_fractions
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, message sizes will be displayed with  a  single  decimal
	      value  for  sizes	 from 0	to 10 kilobytes	and 1 to 10 megabytes.
	      See formatstrings-size.

       size_show_mb
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set, message sizes will display megabytes for values  greater
	      than or equal to 1 megabyte.  See	formatstrings-size.

       size_units_on_left
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set, message sizes units will be displayed to the left	of the
	      number.  See formatstrings-size.

       sleep_time
	      Type: number
	      Default: 1

	      Specifies	 time,	in  seconds, to	pause while displaying certain
	      informational messages, while moving from	folder to  folder  and
	      after  expunging	messages from the current folder.  The default
	      is to pause one second, so a value of zero for this option  sup-
	      presses the pause.

       smart_wrap
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls	the  display  of lines longer than the screen width in
	      the internal pager. If set, long lines are  wrapped  at  a  word
	      boundary.	  If  unset,  lines  are  simply wrapped at the	screen
	      edge. Also see the $markers variable.

       smileys
	      Type: regular expression
	      Default: "(>From )|(:[-^]?[][)(><}{|/DP])"

	      The pager	uses this variable to catch some  common  false	 posi-
	      tives  of	$quote_regexp, most notably smileys and	not consider a
	      line quoted text if it also matches $smileys. This  mostly  hap-
	      pens at the beginning of a line.

       smime_ask_cert_label
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This flag	controls whether you want to be	asked to enter a label
	      for  a  certificate about	to be added to the database or not. It
	      is set by	default.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_ca_location
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This variable contains the name of either	a directory, or	a file
	      which  contains  trusted	certificates  for  use	with  OpenSSL.
	      (S/MIME only)

       smime_certificates
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      Since  for  S/MIME there is no pubring/secring as	with PGP, mutt
	      has to handle storage and	retrieval of keys by itself.  This  is
	      very  basic  right  now, and keys	and certificates are stored in
	      two different directories, both  named  as  the  hash-value  re-
	      trieved  from  OpenSSL.  There  is  an index file	which contains
	      mailbox-address keyid pairs, and which can be  manually  edited.
	      This option points to the	location of the	certificates.  (S/MIME
	      only)

       smime_decrypt_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  format string specifies a command which is used to decrypt
	      application/x-pkcs7-mime attachments.

	      The OpenSSL command formats have their own set of	printf(3)-like
	      sequences	similar	to PGP's:
	      %f     Expands to	the name of a file containing a	message.
	      %s     Expands to	the name of a file  containing	the  signature
		     part
				of  a multipart/signed attachment when verify-
		     ing it.
	      %k     The key-pair specified with $smime_default_key
	      %c     One or more certificate IDs.
	      %a     The algorithm used	for encryption.
	      %d     The   message    digest	algorithm    specified	  with
		     $smime_sign_digest_alg.
	      %C     CA	location:  Depending on	whether	$smime_ca_location
				points to a directory or file, this expands to
				"-CApath   $smime_ca_location"	 or   "-CAfile
		     $smime_ca_location".

	      For examples on how to configure these formats, see the smime.rc
	      in the samples/ subdirectory which has been  installed  on  your
	      system alongside the documentation.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_decrypt_use_default_key
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set (default)	this tells mutt	to use the default key for de-
	      cryption.	Otherwise, if managing multiple	certificate-key-pairs,
	      mutt will	try to use the mailbox-address to determine the	key to
	      use. It will ask you to supply a key,  if	 it  can't  find  one.
	      (S/MIME only)

       smime_default_key
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  is	the default key-pair to	use for	S/MIME operations, and
	      must be set to the keyid (the hash-value that OpenSSL generates)
	      to work properly.

	      It will  be  used	 for  encryption  (see	$postpone_encrypt  and
	      $smime_self_encrypt).  If	 GPGME	is enabled, this is the	key id
	      displayed	by gpgsm.

	      It will be used  for  decryption	unless	$smime_decrypt_use_de-
	      fault_key	is unset.

	      It will also be used for signing unless $smime_sign_as is	set.

	      The  (now	deprecated) smime_self_encrypt_as is an	alias for this
	      variable,	and should no longer be	used.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_encrypt_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to create encrypted S/MIME messages.

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_encrypt_with
	      Type: string
	      Default: "aes256"

	      This  sets  the  algorithm  that	should be used for encryption.
	      Valid choices are	"aes128", "aes192", "aes256",  "des",  "des3",
	      "rc2-40",	"rc2-64", "rc2-128".  (S/MIME only)

       smime_get_cert_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command  is	used to	extract	X509 certificates from a PKCS7
	      structure.

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_get_cert_email_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command  is	 used to extract the mail address(es) used for
	      storing X509 certificates, and  for  verification	 purposes  (to
	      check  whether the certificate was issued	for the	sender's mail-
	      box).

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_get_signer_cert_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command  is	used to	extract	only the signers X509 certifi-
	      cate from	a S/MIME signature, so that  the  certificate's	 owner
	      may get compared to the email's "From:" field.

	      This  is a format	string,	see the	$smime_decrypt_command command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_import_cert_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to import a certificate via smime_keys.

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_is_default
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      The  default behavior of mutt is to use PGP on all auto-sign/en-
	      cryption operations. To override and to use OpenSSL instead this
	      must be set.  However, this has no effect	while replying,	 since
	      mutt  will  automatically	 select	 the same application that was
	      used to sign/encrypt the	original  message.   (Note  that  this
	      variable	can  be	 overridden  by	 unsetting  $crypt_autosmime.)
	      (S/MIME only)

       smime_keys
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      Since for	S/MIME there is	no pubring/secring as with  PGP,  mutt
	      has  to  handle  storage	and retrieval of keys/certs by itself.
	      This is very basic right now, and	stores keys  and  certificates
	      in  two  different directories, both named as the	hash-value re-
	      trieved from OpenSSL. There is  an  index	 file  which  contains
	      mailbox-address  keyid  pair,  and which can be manually edited.
	      This option points to the	location of the	private	keys.  (S/MIME
	      only)

       smime_pkcs7_default_smime_type
	      Type: string
	      Default: "signed"

	      The application/pkcs7-mime ".p7m"	type can contain EnvelopedData
	      (encrypted) or SignedData.  Senders should  add  a  "smime-type"
	      parameter	 to the	content	type, to help receiving	MUAs correctly
	      handle the data.	Unfortunately,	some  clients  (e.g.  Outlook)
	      don't add	this parameter.

	      This  option  is used to determine which type to assume when the
	      "smime-type" parameter is	missing	for ".p7m" file	types.

	      Accepted values are "enveloped" and "signed".

       smime_pk7out_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to extract PKCS7 structures of S/MIME  sig-
	      natures, in order	to extract the public X509 certificate(s).

	      This  is a format	string,	see the	$smime_decrypt_command command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_self_encrypt
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	S/MIME encrypted messages will also be encrypted using
	      the certificate in $smime_default_key.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_sign_as
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      If you have a separate key to use	for signing,  you  should  set
	      this  to	the  signing  key.  Most  people will only need	to set
	      $smime_default_key.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_sign_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to created S/MIME signatures	of type	multi-
	      part/signed, which can be	read by	all mail clients.

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  NOTE: %c and %k will de-
	      fault  to	 $smime_sign_as	 if set, otherwise $smime_default_key.
	      (S/MIME only)

       smime_sign_digest_alg
	      Type: string
	      Default: "sha256"

	      This sets	the algorithm that should be used  for	the  signature
	      message  digest.	 Valid	choices	 are  "md5", "sha1", "sha224",
	      "sha256",	"sha384", "sha512".  (S/MIME only)

       smime_sign_opaque_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This command is used to created S/MIME signatures	of type	appli-
	      cation/x-pkcs7-signature,	which can  only	 be  handled  by  mail
	      clients supporting the S/MIME extension.

	      This  is a format	string,	see the	$smime_decrypt_command command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_timeout
	      Type: number (long)
	      Default: 300

	      The number of seconds after which	a cached passphrase  will  ex-
	      pire if not used.	 (S/MIME only)

       smime_verify_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command is used to verify S/MIME signatures	of type	multi-
	      part/signed.

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smime_verify_opaque_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  command is used to verify S/MIME signatures	of type	appli-
	      cation/x-pkcs7-mime.

	      This is a	format string, see the $smime_decrypt_command  command
	      for possible printf(3)-like sequences.  (S/MIME only)

       smtp_authenticators
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      This  is	a  colon-delimited list	of authentication methods mutt
	      may attempt to use to log	in to an SMTP  server,	in  the	 order
	      mutt should try them.  Authentication methods are	any SASL mech-
	      anism,  e.g.  "digest-md5", "gssapi" or "cram-md5".  This	option
	      is case-insensitive. If it is "unset" (the  default)  mutt  will
	      try   all	 available  methods,  in  order	 from  most-secure  to
	      least-secure.

	      Example:

	      set smtp_authenticators="digest-md5:cram-md5"

       smtp_oauth_refresh_command
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      The command to run to generate an	OAUTH refresh token for	autho-
	      rizing your connection to	your SMTP server.  This	 command  will
	      be run on	every connection attempt that uses the OAUTHBEARER au-
	      thentication mechanism.  See "oauth" for details.

       smtp_pass
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Specifies	 the  password	for your SMTP account.	If unset, Mutt
	      will prompt you for your password	when you first send  mail  via
	      SMTP.  See $smtp_url to configure	mutt to	send mail via SMTP.

	      Warning:	you  should  only  use	this  option when you are on a
	      fairly secure machine, because the superuser can read your  mut-
	      trc even if you are the only one who can read the	file.

       smtp_url
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Defines  the  SMTP  smarthost where sent messages	should relayed
	      for delivery. This should	take the form of an SMTP URL, e.g.:

	      smtp[s]://[user[:pass]@]host[:port]

	      where "[...]" denotes an optional	part.  Setting	this  variable
	      overrides	the value of the $sendmail variable.

	      Also see $write_bcc.

       sort
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: date

	      Specifies	 how to	sort messages in the "index" menu.  Valid val-
	      ues are:
	      -	date or	date-sent
	      -	date-received
	      -	from
	      -	mailbox-order (unsorted)
	      -	score
	      -	size
	      -	spam
	      -	subject
	      -	threads
	      -	to

	      You may optionally use the "reverse-" prefix to specify  reverse
	      sorting order (example: "set sort=reverse-date-sent").

	      For  values  except  "threads",  this  provides the primary sort
	      method.  When two	message	sort values are	equal, $sort_aux  will
	      be used for a secondary sort.

	      When  set	 to  "threads",	Mutt threads messages in the index. It
	      uses the variable	$sort_thread_groups to	sort  between  threads
	      (at  the	top/root level), and $sort_aux to sort sub-threads and
	      children.

       sort_alias
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: alias

	      Specifies	how the	entries	in the "alias" menu are	 sorted.   The
	      following	are legal values:
	      -	address	(sort alphabetically by	email address)
	      -	alias (sort alphabetically by alias name)
	      -	unsorted (leave	in order specified in .muttrc)

       sort_aux
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: date

	      For  non-threaded	 mode, this provides a secondary sort for mes-
	      sages in the "index" menu, used when the $sort  value  is	 equal
	      for two messages.

	      When sorting by threads, this variable controls how the branches
	      of  the  thread  trees are sorted.  This can be set to any value
	      that $sort can, except "threads" (in that	case, mutt  will  just
	      use  "date-sent").   You	can also specify the "last-" prefix in
	      addition to the "reverse-" prefix, but "last-" must  come	 after
	      "reverse-".   The	 "last-"  prefix  causes messages to be	sorted
	      against its siblings by which has	the last descendant, using the
	      rest of $sort_aux	as an ordering.	 For instance,

	      set sort_aux=last-date-received

	      would mean that if a new message is received  in	a  sub-thread,
	      that sub-thread becomes the last one displayed.

	      Note:  For  reversed-threads  $sort order, $sort_aux is reversed
	      again (which is not the right thing to do, but kept to not break
	      any existing configuration setting).

       sort_browser
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: alpha

	      Specifies	how to sort entries in the file	browser.  By  default,
	      the entries are sorted alphabetically.  Valid values:
	      -	alpha (alphabetically)
	      -	count
	      -	date
	      -	size
	      -	unread
	      -	unsorted

	      You  may optionally use the "reverse-" prefix to specify reverse
	      sorting order (example: "set sort_browser=reverse-date").

       sort_browser_mailboxes
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: unsorted

	      Specifies	how to sort entries in the mailbox  browser.   By  de-
	      fault,  the entries are unsorted,	displayed in the same order as
	      listed in	the "mailboxes"	command.  Valid	values:
	      -	alpha (alphabetically)
	      -	count
	      -	date
	      -	size
	      -	unread
	      -	unsorted

	      You may optionally use the "reverse-" prefix to specify  reverse
	      sorting  order (example: "set sort_browser_mailboxes=reverse-al-
	      pha").

       sort_re
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      This variable is	only  useful  when  sorting  by	 threads  with
	      $strict_threads  unset.	In that	case, it changes the heuristic
	      mutt uses	to thread messages by  subject.	  With	$sort_re  set,
	      mutt  will only attach a message as the child of another message
	      by subject if the	subject	of the child  message  starts  with  a
	      substring	 matching the setting of $reply_regexp.	 With $sort_re
	      unset, mutt will attach the message whether or not this  is  the
	      case,  as	 long  as the non-$reply_regexp	parts of both messages
	      are identical.

       sort_thread_groups
	      Type: sort order
	      Default: aux

	      When sorting by threads, this variable controls how threads  are
	      sorted  in  relation  to	other threads (at the top/root level).
	      This can be set to any value that	$sort can,  except  "threads".
	      You  can also specify the	"last-"	prefix in addition to the "re-
	      verse-" prefix, but "last-" must	come  after  "reverse-".   The
	      "last-" prefix causes messages to	be sorted against its siblings
	      by   which   has	 the   last  descendant,  using	 the  rest  of
	      $sort_thread_groups as an	ordering.

	      For backward compatibility, the default value  is	 "aux",	 which
	      means  to	 use  $sort_aux	for top-level thread sorting too.  The
	      value "aux" does not respect "last-" or "reverse-" prefixes,  it
	      simply delegates sorting directly	to $sort_aux.

	      Note:  For  reversed-threads $sort order,	$sort_thread_groups is
	      reversed again (which is not the right thing to do, but kept  to
	      not break	any existing configuration setting).

       spam_separator
	      Type: string
	      Default: ","

	      This  variable  controls what happens when multiple spam headers
	      are matched: if unset, each successive header will overwrite any
	      previous matches value for the spam label. If set, each  succes-
	      sive  match  will	 append	to the previous, using this variable's
	      value as a separator.

       spoolfile
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      If your spool mailbox is in a non-default	place where Mutt  can-
	      not  find	 it,  you can specify its location with	this variable.
	      Mutt will	initially set this variable to the value of the	 envi-
	      ronment variable $MAIL or	$MAILDIR if either is defined.

       ssl_ca_certificates_file
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This  variable  specifies	 a file	containing trusted CA certifi-
	      cates.  Any server certificate that is signed with one of	 these
	      CA certificates is also automatically accepted. (GnuTLS only)

	      Example:

	      set ssl_ca_certificates_file=/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt

       ssl_client_cert
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      The file containing a client certificate and its associated pri-
	      vate key.

       ssl_force_tls
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  this variable	is set,	Mutt will require that all connections
	      to remote	servers	be encrypted. Furthermore it will  attempt  to
	      negotiate	TLS even if the	server does not	advertise the capabil-
	      ity,  since it would otherwise have to abort the connection any-
	      way. This	option supersedes $ssl_starttls.

       ssl_min_dh_prime_bits
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      This variable specifies the minimum acceptable  prime  size  (in
	      bits)  for  use in any Diffie-Hellman key	exchange. A value of 0
	      will use the default from	the GNUTLS library. (GnuTLS only)

       ssl_starttls
	      Type: quadoption
	      Default: yes

	      If set (the default), mutt  will	attempt	 to  use  STARTTLS  on
	      servers  advertising  the	 capability. When unset, mutt will not
	      attempt to use STARTTLS regardless of the	server's capabilities.

	      Note that	STARTTLS is subject to many kinds of attacks,  includ-
	      ing  the	ability	of a machine-in-the-middle to suppress the ad-
	      vertising	of support.  Setting $ssl_force_tls is recommended  if
	      you rely on STARTTLS.

       ssl_use_sslv2
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set  ,  Mutt	will use SSLv2 when communicating with servers
	      that request it. N.B. As of 2011,	SSLv2 is considered  insecure,
	      and	   using	  is	      inadvisable.	   See
	      https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6176 .  (OpenSSL only)

       ssl_use_sslv3
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set , Mutt will use SSLv3  when  communicating	 with  servers
	      that  request it.	N.B. As	of 2015, SSLv3 is considered insecure,
	      and	using	    it	     is	       inadvisable.	   See
	      https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7525 .

       ssl_use_tlsv1
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set  , Mutt will use TLSv1.0 when communicating with servers
	      that request it. N.B. As of 2015,	TLSv1.0	 is  considered	 inse-
	      cure,	 and	  using	    it	   is	  inadvisable.	   See
	      https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7525 .

       ssl_use_tlsv1_1
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If set , Mutt will use TLSv1.1 when communicating	 with  servers
	      that  request  it.  N.B. As of 2015, TLSv1.1 is considered inse-
	      cure,	and	using	  it	 is	 inadvisable.	   See
	      https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7525 .

       ssl_use_tlsv1_2
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set  , Mutt will use TLSv1.2 when communicating with servers
	      that request it.

       ssl_use_tlsv1_3
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set , Mutt will use TLSv1.3 when communicating	 with  servers
	      that request it.

       ssl_usesystemcerts
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set to yes, mutt will	use CA certificates in the system-wide
	      certificate store	when  checking	if  a  server  certificate  is
	      signed by	a trusted CA. (OpenSSL only)

       ssl_verify_dates
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If  set  (the  default),	mutt  will  not	automatically accept a
	      server certificate that is either	not yet	valid or  already  ex-
	      pired.  You  should  only	unset this for particular known	hosts,
	      using the	<account-hook> function.

       ssl_verify_host
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      If set (the default),  mutt  will	 not  automatically  accept  a
	      server  certificate whose	host name does not match the host used
	      in your folder URL. You should only unset	 this  for  particular
	      known hosts, using the <account-hook> function.

       ssl_verify_host_override
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Defines  an alternate host name to verify	the server certificate
	      against.	This should not	be set unless you are  sure  what  you
	      are  doing,  but	it  might be useful for	connection to a	.onion
	      host without a properly configured host name in the certificate.
	      See $ssl_verify_host.

       ssl_verify_partial_chains
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      This option should not be	changed	from the  default  unless  you
	      understand what you are doing.

	      Setting  this variable to	yes will permit	verifying partial cer-
	      tification chains, i. e. a certificate chain where not the root,
	      but an intermediate certificate CA, or the host certificate, are
	      marked trusted (in $certificate_file), without marking the  root
	      signing CA as trusted.

	      (OpenSSL 1.0.2b and newer	only).

       ssl_ciphers
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Contains	a  colon-separated  list  of ciphers to	use when using
	      SSL.  For	OpenSSL, see ciphers(1)	for the	syntax of the string.

	      For GnuTLS, this option will be used in place of "NORMAL"	at the
	      start of the priority string.  See  gnutls_priority_init(3)  for
	      the  syntax  and	more  details.	(Note: GnuTLS version 2.1.7 or
	      higher is	required.)

       status_chars
	      Type: string
	      Default: "-*%A"

	      Controls the characters used by  the  "%r"  indicator  in	 $sta-
	      tus_format.  The first character is used when the	mailbox	is un-
	      changed. The second is used when the mailbox has	been  changed,
	      and  it  needs  to  be  resynchronized. The third	is used	if the
	      mailbox is in read-only mode, or if  the	mailbox	 will  not  be
	      written  when  exiting  that  mailbox (You can toggle whether to
	      write changes to a mailbox with  the  <toggle-write>  operation,
	      bound  by	 default  to "%"). The fourth is used to indicate that
	      the current folder has been opened in attach- message mode (Cer-
	      tain operations like composing a new mail, replying, forwarding,
	      etc. are not permitted in	this mode).

       status_format
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "-%r-Mutt: %f [Msgs:%?M?%M/?%m%?n? New:%n?%?o? Old:%o?%?d? Del:%d?%?F? Flag:%F?%?t? Tag:%t?%?p? Post:%p?%?b? Inc:%b?%?B?	Back:%B?%?l? %l?]---(%s/%?T?%T/?%S)-%>-(%P)---"

	      Controls the format of the status	line displayed in the  "index"
	      menu.   This string is similar to	$index_format, but has its own
	      set of printf(3)-like sequences:
	      %b     number of mailboxes with new mail *
	      %B     number of backgrounded editing sessions *
	      %d     number of deleted messages	*
	      %f     the full pathname of the current mailbox
	      %F     number of flagged messages	*
	      %h     local hostname
	      %l     size (in bytes)  of  the  current	mailbox	 (see  format-
		     strings-size) *
	      %L     size  (in bytes) of the messages shown (i.e., which match
		     the current limit)	(see formatstrings-size) *
	      %m     the number	of messages in the mailbox *
	      %M     the number	of messages shown (i.e., which match the  cur-
		     rent limit) *
	      %n     number of new messages in the mailbox *
	      %o     number of old unread messages *
	      %p     number of postponed messages *
	      %P     percentage	of the way through the index
	      %r     modified/read-only/won't-write/attach-message  indicator,
		     according to $status_chars
	      %R     number of read messages *
	      %s     current sorting mode ($sort)
	      %S     current aux sorting method	($sort_aux)
	      %t     number of tagged messages *
	      %T     current thread group sorting method ($sort_thread_groups)
		     *
	      %u     number of unread messages *
	      %v     Mutt version string
	      %V     currently active limit pattern, if	any *
	      %>X    right justify the rest of the string and pad with "X"
	      %|X    pad to the	end of the line	with "X"
	      %*X    soft-fill with character "X" as pad

	      For an explanation of "soft-fill", see the  $index_format	 docu-
	      mentation.

	      *	= can be optionally printed if nonzero

	      Some  of	the  above sequences can be used to optionally print a
	      string if	their value is nonzero.	 For  example,	you  may  only
	      want  to see the number of flagged messages if such messages ex-
	      ist, since zero is not particularly meaningful.	To  optionally
	      print  a	string based upon one of the above sequences, the fol-
	      lowing construct is used:

	      %?<sequence_char>?<optional_string>?

	      where sequence_char is a character from the table	above, and op-
	      tional_string is the  string  you	 would	like  printed  if  se-
	      quence_char  is  nonzero.	 optional_string may contain other se-
	      quences as well as normal	text, but you may  not	nest  optional
	      strings.

	      Here is an example illustrating how to optionally	print the num-
	      ber of new messages in a mailbox:

	      %?n?%n new messages.?

	      You can also switch between two strings using the	following con-
	      struct:

	      %?<sequence_char>?<if_string>&<else_string>?

	      If the value of sequence_char is non-zero, if_string will	be ex-
	      panded, otherwise	else_string will be expanded.

	      You  can	force  the result of any printf(3)-like	sequence to be
	      lowercase	by prefixing the sequence character with an underscore
	      ("_") sign.  For example,	if you want to display the local host-
	      name in lowercase, you would use:	"%_h".

	      If you prefix the	sequence character with	a colon	(":")  charac-
	      ter, mutt	will replace any dots in the expansion by underscores.
	      This  might be helpful with IMAP folders that don't like dots in
	      folder names.

       status_on_top
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Setting this variable causes the "status bar" to be displayed on
	      the first	line of	the screen rather than	near  the  bottom.  If
	      $help is set, too	it'll be placed	at the bottom.

       strict_threads
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      If  set,	threading  will	only make use of the "In-Reply-To" and
	      "References:" fields when	you $sort by message threads.  By  de-
	      fault,  messages	with  the same subject are grouped together in
	      "pseudo threads.". This may not always be	desirable, such	as  in
	      a	 personal  mailbox where you might have	several	unrelated mes-
	      sages with the subjects like "hi"	which  will  get  grouped  to-
	      gether.  See also	$sort_re for a less drastic way	of controlling
	      this behavior.

       suspend
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When unset, mutt won't stop when the user	presses	the terminal's
	      susp key,	usually	"^Z". This is useful if	you run	mutt inside an
	      xterm using a command like "xterm	-e mutt".

       text_flowed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will generate "format=flowed" bodies with a  con-
	      tent type	of "text/plain;	format=flowed".	 This format is	easier
	      to  handle  for  some mailing software, and generally just looks
	      like ordinary text.  To actually make use	of this	format's  fea-
	      tures, you'll need support in your editor.

	      The  option  only	 controls  newly composed messages.  Postponed
	      messages,	resent messages, and draft messages  (via  -H  on  the
	      command line) will use the content-type of the source message.

	      Note that	$indent_string is ignored when this option is set.

       thorough_search
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Affects  the  ~b,	~B, and	~h search operations described in sec-
	      tion "patterns".	If set,	the headers  and  body/attachments  of
	      messages	to be searched are decoded before searching. If	unset,
	      messages are searched as they appear in the folder.

	      Users searching attachments or for non-ASCII  characters	should
	      set  this	 value because decoding	also includes MIME parsing/de-
	      coding and possible character set	 conversions.  Otherwise  mutt
	      will  attempt to match against the raw message received (for ex-
	      ample quoted-printable encoded or	with  encoded  headers)	 which
	      may lead to incorrect search results.

       thread_received
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set, mutt uses the date received rather than the date sent
	      to thread	messages by subject.

       tilde
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	the internal-pager will	pad blank lines	to the	bottom
	      of the screen with a tilde ("~").

       time_inc
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      Along  with  $read_inc,  $write_inc, and $net_inc, this variable
	      controls the frequency with  which  progress  updates  are  dis-
	      played.  It  suppresses updates less than	$time_inc milliseconds
	      apart. This can improve throughput on systems with  slow	termi-
	      nals, or when running mutt on a remote system.

	      Also see the "tuning" section of the manual for performance con-
	      siderations.

       timeout
	      Type: number
	      Default: 600

	      When Mutt	is waiting for user input either idling	in menus or in
	      an  interactive prompt, Mutt would block until input is present.
	      Depending	on the context,	this would prevent certain  operations
	      from working, like checking for new mail or keeping an IMAP con-
	      nection alive.

	      This  variable  controls how many	seconds	Mutt will at most wait
	      until it aborts waiting for input, performs these	operations and
	      continues	to wait	for input.

	      A	value of zero or less will cause Mutt to never time out.

       tmpdir
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      This variable allows you to specify where	Mutt  will  place  its
	      temporary	 files	needed	for displaying and composing messages.
	      If this variable is not set, the environment variable $TMPDIR is
	      used.  If	$TMPDIR	is not set then	"/tmp" is used.

       to_chars
	      Type: string
	      Default: " +TCFL"

	      Controls the character used to indicate mail addressed  to  you.
	      The  first  character  is	 the one used when the mail is not ad-
	      dressed to your address.	The second is used when	 you  are  the
	      only  recipient  of the message.	The third is when your address
	      appears in the "To:" header field, but you are not the only  re-
	      cipient  of the message.	The fourth character is	used when your
	      address is specified in the "Cc:"	header field, but you are  not
	      the  only	 recipient.   The  fifth character is used to indicate
	      mail that	was sent by you.  The sixth character is used to indi-
	      cate when	a mail was sent	to a mailing-list you subscribe	to.

       trash
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      If set, this variable specifies the path	of  the	 trash	folder
	      where  the  mails	 marked	for deletion will be moved, instead of
	      being irremediably purged.

	      NOTE: When you delete a message in the trash folder, it  is  re-
	      ally deleted, so that you	have a way to clean the	trash.

       ts_icon_format
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "M%?n?AIL&ail?"

	      Controls	the format of the icon title, as long as "$ts_enabled"
	      is set.  This string is identical	in formatting to the one  used
	      by "$status_format".

       ts_enabled
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls	whether	mutt tries to set the terminal status line and
	      icon name.  Most terminal	emulators emulate the status  line  in
	      the window title.

       ts_status_format
	      Type: string (localized)
	      Default: "Mutt with %?m?%m messages&no messages?%?n? [%n NEW]?"

	      Controls	the  format of the terminal status line	(or window ti-
	      tle), provided that "$ts_enabled"	has been set. This  string  is
	      identical	in formatting to the one used by "$status_format".

       tunnel
	      Type: string
	      Default: ""

	      Setting  this  variable will cause mutt to open a	pipe to	a com-
	      mand instead of a	raw socket. You	may be able to use this	to set
	      up preauthenticated connections to your  IMAP/POP3/SMTP  server.
	      Example:

	      set tunnel="ssh -q mailhost.net /usr/local/libexec/imapd"

	      Note: For	this example to	work you must be able to log in	to the
	      remote machine without having to enter a password.

	      When  set,  Mutt	uses  the  tunnel  for all remote connections.
	      Please see "account-hook"	in the manual for how to use different
	      tunnel commands per connection.

       tunnel_is_secure
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will assume the $tunnel connection	does not  need
	      STARTTLS	to be enabled.	It will	also allow IMAP	PREAUTH	server
	      responses	inside a tunnel	to proceed.  This  is  appropriate  if
	      $tunnel uses ssh or directly invokes the server locally.

	      When  unset,  Mutt  will	negotiate  STARTTLS  according	to the
	      ssl_starttls and ssl_force_tls variables.	 If  ssl_force_tls  is
	      set,  Mutt will abort connecting if an IMAP server responds with
	      PREAUTH.	This setting is	appropriate if $tunnel does  not  pro-
	      vide security and	could be tampered with by attackers.

       uncollapse_jump
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When  set,  Mutt	will  jump to the next unread message, if any,
	      when the current thread is uncollapsed.

       uncollapse_new
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	 Mutt  will  automatically  uncollapse	any  collapsed
	      thread  that  receives  a	 newly delivered message.  When	unset,
	      collapsed	threads	will remain collapsed.	The  presence  of  the
	      newly delivered message will still affect	index sorting, though.

       use_8bitmime
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Warning: do not set this variable	unless you are using a version
	      of sendmail which	supports the -B8BITMIME	flag (such as sendmail
	      8.8.x) or	you may	not be able to send mail.

	      When  set,  Mutt	will invoke $sendmail with the -B8BITMIME flag
	      when sending 8-bit messages to enable ESMTP negotiation.

       use_domain
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will qualify all local  addresses	(ones  without
	      the  "@host" portion) with the value of $hostname.  If unset, no
	      addresses	will be	qualified.

       use_envelope_from
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will set the envelope sender of the message.   If
	      $envelope_from_address is	set, it	will be	used as	the sender ad-
	      dress. If	unset, mutt will attempt to derive the sender from the
	      "From:" header.

	      Note  that  this information is passed to	sendmail command using
	      the -f command line switch. Therefore setting this option	is not
	      useful if	the $sendmail variable already contains	-f or  if  the
	      executable  pointed  to  by  $sendmail  doesn't  support	the -f
	      switch.

       use_from
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will generate the "From:" header field when send-
	      ing messages.  If	unset, no "From:" header field will be	gener-
	      ated unless the user explicitly sets one using the "my_hdr" com-
	      mand.

       use_ipv6
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	Mutt will look for IPv6	addresses of hosts it tries to
	      contact.	 If this option	is unset, Mutt will restrict itself to
	      IPv4 addresses.  Normally, the default should work.

       user_agent
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      When set,	mutt will add a	"User-Agent:" header to	outgoing  mes-
	      sages,  indicating  which	version	of mutt	was used for composing
	      them.

       visual
	      Type: path
	      Default: ""

	      Specifies	the visual editor to invoke when the "~v"  command  is
	      given in the built-in editor.

       wait_key
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls	whether	 Mutt will ask you to press a key after	an ex-
	      ternal command has been invoked by these	functions:  <shell-es-
	      cape>,   <pipe-message>,	 <pipe-entry>,	 <print-message>,  and
	      <print-entry> commands.

	      It is also used when viewing attachments with "auto_view",  pro-
	      vided  that  the corresponding mailcap entry has a needsterminal
	      flag, and	the external program is	interactive.

	      When set,	Mutt will always ask for a key.	When unset, Mutt  will
	      wait  for	a key only if the external command returned a non-zero
	      status.

       weed
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      When set,	mutt will weed headers when displaying,	forwarding, or
	      replying to messages.

	      Also  see	  $copy_decode_weed,   $pipe_decode_weed,   $print_de-
	      code_weed.

       wrap
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      When set to a positive value, mutt will wrap text	at $wrap char-
	      acters.	When  set  to a	negative value,	mutt will wrap text so
	      that there are $wrap characters of empty space on	the right side
	      of the terminal. Setting it to zero makes	mutt wrap at the  ter-
	      minal width.

	      Also see $reflow_wrap.

       wrap_headers
	      Type: number
	      Default: 78

	      This  option specifies the number	of characters to use for wrap-
	      ping an outgoing message's headers. Allowed values  are  between
	      78 and 998 inclusive.

	      Note:  This  option usually shouldn't be changed.	RFC5233	recom-
	      mends a line length of 78	(the default), so please  only	change
	      this setting when	you know what you're doing.

       wrap_search
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: yes

	      Controls whether searches	wrap around the	end.

	      When  set,  searches  will wrap around the first (or last) item.
	      When unset, incremental searches will not	wrap.

       wrapmargin
	      Type: number
	      Default: 0

	      (DEPRECATED) Equivalent to setting $wrap with a negative value.

       write_bcc
	      Type: boolean
	      Default: no

	      Controls whether mutt writes out the "Bcc:" header when  prepar-
	      ing  messages  to	be sent.  Some MTAs, such as Exim and Courier,
	      do not strip the "Bcc:" header; so it is advisable to leave this
	      unset unless you have a particular need for the header to	be  in
	      the sent message.

	      If  mutt	is  set	 to deliver directly via SMTP (see $smtp_url),
	      this option does nothing:	mutt will never	write out  the	"Bcc:"
	      header in	this case.

	      Note  this  option only affects the sending of messages.	Fcc'ed
	      copies of	a message will always contain the "Bcc:" header	if one
	      exists.

       write_inc
	      Type: number
	      Default: 10

	      When  writing  a	mailbox,  a  message  will  be	printed	 every
	      $write_inc  messages  to indicate	progress.  If set to 0,	only a
	      single message will be displayed before writing a	mailbox.

	      Also see the $read_inc, $net_inc and $time_inc variables and the
	      "tuning" section of the manual for performance considerations.

SEE ALSO
       iconv(1),   iconv(3),   mailcap(5),   maildir(5),   mbox(5),   mutt(1),
       printf(3), regex(7), strftime(3)

       The Mutt	Manual

       The Mutt	home page: http://www.mutt.org/

AUTHOR
       Michael Elkins, and others.  Use	<mutt-dev@mutt.org> to contact the de-
       velopers.

Unix				 January 2019			     muttrc(5)

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