Sup
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Sup | ||
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5 | 6 | |
878 | 3,584 | |
0.3% | - | |
6.9 | 4.6 | |
7 days ago | 18 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v2.0 only | MIT License |
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Sup
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Show HN: Sup – one liners to distribute binaries
Sup is also “a console-based email client for people with a lot of email”: https://sup-heliotrope.github.io/
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People who use VIM/NVIM extensively, What's your typing speed, and do you touch type?
A long time ago I used https://sup-heliotrope.github.io/ , which is sort of mutt with a gmail approach to email. Being a curses-based email client, it of course lets you shell out to vim for writing your email.
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Sup – A curses threads-with-tags style email client
I enjoyed reading the Philosophy [1] behind Sup, for the glimpse into how Gmail's immediate search feature changed how people use email clients, and how it inspired Sup.
[1]: https://github.com/sup-heliotrope/sup/wiki/Philosophy
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mutt VS Sup - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 5 Jan 2022
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The Ruby “mail” gem is broken since December 3, 2022
"2.8.0.1. Fixes file permissions in 2.8.0 release. No code changes."
https://github.com/mikel/mail/tags
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String conversion
I would look to existing libraries to see how they solve the problem. Stack Overflow is OK, but I find that the "one liner" solutions you find there often oversimplify. There is a popular, and currently maintained, Rubygem library called Mail that includes a class for quoted printable, which in turn provides a class method for decoding quoted printable strings.
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Anonymous leaks database of the Russian Ministry of Defence
This is easiest if you have a MacBook since Ruby is installed by default. You can make a small script using this Ruby gem (plugin) - https://github.com/mikel/mail
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Ruby's Email Address Regexp
There are basically three levels of address checking:
1) You need to validate an email field for login or a website - checking for an @ mark with some text before and at least one . after the @ will do for this.
2) You need to do some sort of address validation, library regexps like this will do for 99.9...% of these.
3) You are building an email handling system which needs to actually support the RFCs, in which case regexp will not handle what you need, and you need to use a proper parser, like https://github.com/mikel/mail/tree/master/lib/mail/parsers
Ref: I am the original author of the Ruby mail gem.
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Need Help With Using If Condition.
Email addresses have a lot of gotchas that can make rolling your own logic hard. I haven't used Ruby in a while but there are gems like Mail that can help validating email addresses easier.
What are some alternatives?
Incoming - Incoming! helps you receive email in your Rack apps.
MailCatcher - Catches mail and serves it through a dream.
Ahoy Email - First-party email analytics for Rails
LetterOpener - Preview mail in the browser instead of sending.
premailer-rails - CSS styled emails without the hassle.
Roadie - Making HTML emails comfortable for the Ruby rockstars
Mailman
Maily - 📫 Rails Engine to preview emails in the browser
Maktoub - A simple newsletter engine for Rails