+ <p>This obviously doesn't look very nice, and it makes it very
+ hard to differentiate between text and quoting character. The
+ solution is to configure mutt-ng to "stuff" the quoting:
+
+ <verb>
+ set stuff_quoted
+ </verb>
+
+ <p>This will lead to a nicer result that is easier to read:
+
+ <verb>
+ > Bill, can you please send last month's progress report to Mr.
+ > Morgan? We also urgently need the cost estimation for the new
+ > production server that we want to set up before our customer's
+ > project will go live.
+ </verb>
+
+ <!--}}}-->
+
+ <sect1>Sending <!--{{{-->
+
+ <p>If you want mutt-ng to send emails with <tt/format=flowed/ set, you
+ need to explicitly set it:
+
+ <verb>
+ set text_flowed
+ </verb>
+
+ <p>Additionally, you have to use an editor which supports writing
+ <tt/format=flowed/-conforming emails. For vim, this is done by
+ adding <tt/w/ to the formatoptions (see <tt/:h formatoptions/ and
+ <tt/:h fo-table/) when writing emails.
+
+ <p>Also note that <em/format=flowed/ knows about ``space-stuffing'',
+ that is, when sending messages, some kinds of lines have to be
+ indented with a single space on the sending side. On the receiving
+ side, the first space (if any) is removed. As a consequence and in
+ addition to the above simple setting, please keep this in mind when
+ making manual formattings within the editor. Also note that mutt-ng
+ currently violates the standard (RfC 3676) as it does not
+ space-stuff lines starting with: