xlbiff 4.6.5-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

xlbiff (4.6.5-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * test automation: nmh 1.8-RC2 requires non-empty $HOME (closes: #1029752)

 -- Stephen Gildea <email address hidden>  Mon, 30 Jan 2023 13:19:10 -0800

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Stephen Gildea
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Stephen Gildea
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Mantic release universe misc
Lunar release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
xlbiff_4.6.5-1.dsc 1.9 KiB 4c13745aa17c28d972fa9fca818564c303a327b4a5737ada6aed019ce8f4192d
xlbiff_4.6.5.orig.tar.gz 149.4 KiB 116cce536e218cfaad555374011cc891172b1c24beb1288f8107481d412eb553
xlbiff_4.6.5-1.debian.tar.xz 5.2 KiB 129cba94005fb8a787562fdcb68fd90a2224ed64b9bbb1192edf8cc26f8008dc

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

xlbiff: mail notification pop-up with configurable message scans

 Xlbiff presents enough information to tell you: Is this new mail worth
 reading right now? And it stops distracting you once you decide.
 .
 Xlbiff waits in the background, monitoring your mailbox file or IMAP
 server (or running your custom check-mail script). When a new message
 arrives, it invokes the MH scan(1) command (or your custom
 mail-scanning script) and pops up a window with the output (typically
 the From and Subject line of each new message). If more mail arrives,
 xlbiff scans again and resizes its preview window accordingly.
 .
 Clicking the left mouse button anywhere in the window causes it to
 vanish. It will also vanish if the mailbox becomes empty. Xlbiff
 stays out of your way when there is no new mail and pops up only
 when something requests your attention.

xlbiff-dbgsym: debug symbols for xlbiff