Required tools
--------------
-If you are planning to hack on Mutt-ng, please subscribe to the
-Mutt-ng-devel mailinglist (mutt-ng-deve-l@lists.berlios.de).
+If you are planning to hack on Madmutt, please subscribe to the
+Madmutt-devel mailinglist (Madmutt-deve-l@lists.berlios.de).
Announcements about recent development
versions go to that mailing list, as go technical discussions and
patches.
-You'll need several GNU development utilities for working on mutt-ng:
+You'll need several GNU development utilities for working on Madmutt:
- automake
------------------------
Once you've checked out a copy of the source from SVN from
-svn.berlios.de/svnroot/repos/mutt-ng , you'll need to run the script
+svn.berlios.de/svnroot/repos/Madmutt , you'll need to run the script
called 'autogen.sh' that is in the root directory. The script does all the
automake/autoconf magic that needs to be done with a fresh checkout. If
all steps succeed, you'll have a configure script to start off with.
A word about warnings
---------------------
-Mutt-ng's default build process sets some pretty restrictive compiler
+Madmutt's default build process sets some pretty restrictive compiler
flags which may lead to lots of warnings. Generally, warnings are
something which should be eliminated.
Nevertheless, the code in intl/ is said to generate some warnings with
the compiler settings we usually rely upon. This code is not
-maintained by the Mutt-ng developpers, so please redirect any comments to
+maintained by the Madmutt developpers, so please redirect any comments to
the GNU gettext library's developpers.
- When adding new options, make the old behaviour the default. Also,
add them to UPGRADING in the top-level source directory.
-- try to keep Mutt-ng as portable as possible.
+- try to keep Madmutt as portable as possible.
Documentation
-------------
String comparison
-----------------
-A word of warning about string comparisons: Since Mutt-ng may run in a
+A word of warning about string comparisons: Since Madmutt may run in a
huge variety of locales, case-insensitive string comparisons and
case conversions may be dangerous. For instance, in iso-8859-9,
tolower('I') is DIFFERENT from 'i' - it's indeed the Turkish dotless