Hi Adrian,
> On 16. Jan, 2021, at 23:46, Adrian Klaver wrote:
>
> That is trying to put the toothpaste back in the tube.
yes, but sometimes, just sometimes, things in the olden days were just better.
:-)
> Too many GUI email interfaces these days that use 'advanced` formatting. I
> use Thund
Hi raf,
> On 17. Jan, 2021, at 02:59, raf wrote:
>
> I once wrote a program to do that very thing:
>
> http://raf.org/textmail/
> https://github.com/raforg/textmail/
thanks very much for the nice offer but I mostly read my Mails on a Mac,
sometimes Windows, but never Linux. I have no mail a
Paul Förster writes:
> Hi Adrian,
>
> I'm on a Mac w/ Big Sur (macOS 11.1) and use Apple Mail. I've been on Macs
> since 2003. Apple Mail is simple to use and I love it for exactly that. But
> Apple Mail has everything I expect a mail client to have, it does not allow a
> couple of things wh
Paul Förster writes:
> Hi raf,
>
>> On 17. Jan, 2021, at 02:59, raf wrote:
>>
>> I once wrote a program to do that very thing:
>>
>> http://raf.org/textmail/
>> https://github.com/raforg/textmail/
>
> thanks very much for the nice offer but I mostly read my Mails on a Mac,
> sometimes Windo
Hi Tim,
> On 17. Jan, 2021, at 09:43, Tim Cross wrote:
>
> Highly recommend a mutt and imap combination. Your not locked into any
> particular mail folder format, can still access things via mobile
> devices and can process messages fast and efficiently.
also, there's the good old elm. ;-)
> H
Hi Tim,
> On 17. Jan, 2021, at 10:04, Tim Cross wrote:
>
> There is nothing stopping you from using a text mail program, like mutt,
> on macOS.
right. And what I said was not meant to be a complaint. Otherwise I would have
complained long ago. It was just a wish. :-)
Cheers,
Paul
Also, could it be possible to make messages plain text? I see a lot
of varying fancy fonts and I hate that. I even hate it more when
people post messages not properly trimmed or messages that need
formatting preserved such as select output, i.e. table data, explain
plans, etc. Proportiona
Hi Thiemo,
> On 17. Jan, 2021, at 11:23, Thiemo Kellner
> wrote:
>
> I would not do that. It is the work on the wrong end with doubtful result.
> Wouldn't it be better to reject non-plain-text postings?
coming to think of it:
+1
> While at it, is there a rule of thumb for the length of inlin
On Sun, Jan 17, 2021 at 3:30 AM Paul Förster
wrote:
> > On 17. Jan, 2021, at 11:23, Thiemo Kellner
> wrote:
> >
> > I would not do that. It is the work on the wrong end with doubtful
> result. Wouldn't it be better to reject non-plain-text postings?
>
> coming to think of it:
> +1
>
>
Neither im
>
Yes it’s unfortunately highly probable that someone asking (yet again) how to
tune postgres will not first search for how to formulate a question. Not to
say such info as you, David, and others propose should not be made available as
it certainly should but that we may have to accept such nu
Hello,
I disagree in some of the points:
El día domingo, enero 17, 2021 a las 10:10:28a. m. -0700, David G. Johnston
escribió:
> Neither images nor non-plain-text means that the content is unreadable, not
> useful, or problematic. Dealing with these on an email-by-email basis
> through the c
On 1/17/21 11:04 AM, Matthias Apitz wrote:
Hello,
I disagree in some of the points:
El día domingo, enero 17, 2021 a las 10:10:28a. m. -0700, David G. Johnston
escribió:
Neither images nor non-plain-text means that the content is unreadable, not
useful, or problematic. Dealing with these o
El día domingo, enero 17, 2021 a las 11:11:01a. m. -0800, Adrian Klaver
escribió:
> You can prevent that by going here:
>
> https://lists.postgresql.org/manage/
>
> and checking:
>
> Don't receive an extra copy of mails when listed in To or CC fields
Thanks. I wasn't aware of it and switched
On Sun, Jan 17, 2021 at 12:05 PM Matthias Apitz wrote:
> Mails to a mailing list should be text (or even ASCII) because not all
> subscribers can read HTML or images and they're not needed to describe a
> problem.
>
Its 2021; if an image is useful for the topic at hand (say designing a
system an
El día domingo, enero 17, 2021 a las 12:23:23p. m. -0700, David G. Johnston
escribió:
> Its 2021;
Yes, and for what this argument is good for? Is 2021 better than 2020 or
even worth?
> if an image is useful for the topic at hand (say designing a
> system and having a diagram showing that design
We are looking for working examples of comparing a long text string and
fuzzy-matching multiple words (namely, phrases) contained in.
Any such work examples?
Regards,
David
You want to do NLP in postgres? I would say that you would need a tool like
opennlp to get your tokens and phases, then run a fuzzy matching algorithm.
Unless postgres has nlp capabilities but I am not sure I would use them.
You actually want something fairly complex.
Thanks,
Ben
On Sun, Jan 17,
W dniu 13.01.2021 o 12:28, Laurenz Albe pisze:
On Wed, 2021-01-13 at 07:41 +0100, W.P. wrote:
I am upgrading Fedora 24 to (now) 26, PostgreSQL stopped starting (as
expected), the message from systemctl was to do "postgresql-setup
--upgrade".
Did installed the tool, loaunched.
But it fails with
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