3 [last revision: 2004-12-06]
7 1. What is Sylpheed-Claws?
14 8. Partial downloading of POP3 mails
15 9. Other things that Claws does differently
17 11. Switching from Sylpheed to Sylpheed-Claws
19 13. How to request features
20 14. Installing Claws from CVS
25 1. What is Sylpheed-Claws?
26 --------------------------
28 Sylpheed-Claws is an extended version of Sylpheed, a light weight mail
29 user agent for UNIX. Features in this branch may (or may not) end up in
32 Hiroyuki's ChangeLog is also included in the Claws branch distribution,
33 so it should be easy to spot which features were merged with Sylpheed
34 (and which features were not).
36 For brevity Sylpheed-Claws is referred to as Claws, and Sylpheed as either
44 All plugins, except SpamAssassin, are built automatically
45 if the required libraries are present.
47 Plugins are installed in $PREFIX/lib/sylpheed/plugins/
48 and have a suffix of '.so'
49 To load a plugin go to '/Configuration/Plugins' and click
50 the 'Load Plugin' button.
51 Select the plugin that you want and click 'OK'
54 Enables the scanning of message attachments in mail
55 received from a POP, IMAP or LOCAL account using Clam
56 AntiVirus. It can optionally delete the mail or save it
57 to a designated folder. Preferences can be found in
58 '/Configuration/Preferences/Filtering/Clam AntiVirus'.
59 Clam AntiVirus is available from http://clamav.sourceforge.net/
62 Enables the viewing of html messages using the Dillo web
63 browser, version 0.7.0 or newer. It uses Dillo's --local
64 option by default for safe browsing. Preferences can be
65 found in '/Configuration/Preferences/Message View/Dillo Browser'.
66 Dillo is available from http://www.dillo.org/
69 Enables viewing of attached images and replaces the
70 previous built-in image viewer. Preferences can be
71 found in '/Configuration/Preferences/Message View/
72 Image Viewer'. If the option 'Automatically display
73 attached images' is not set, the user is presented with
74 a 'Load Image' button in the messageview and information
78 Enables the viewing of attachments that have the
79 Content-Type 'text/mathml' using the GtkMathView widget
80 which is available from
81 http://helm.cs.unibo.it/mml-widget/
84 Handles PGP/MIME signed and/or encrypted mails. You can
85 decrypt mails, verify signatures or sign and encrypt your
86 own mails. Preferences are found in '/Configuration/Preferences/
88 Uses GnuPG/GPGME, <http://www.gnupg.org/gpgme.html>
91 Enables the scanning of incoming mail received from a POP,
92 IMAP or LOCAL account using SpamAssassin. It can optionally
93 delete mail identified as spam or save it to a designated
94 folder. Preferences can be found in '/Configuration/
95 Preferences/Filtering/SpamAssassin'.
96 SpamAssassin is available from http://spamassassin.org
98 --enable-spamassassin-plugin
101 Places an icon in the system tray that indicates whether
102 you have any new mail. A tooltip also shows the current
103 new, unread and total number of messages
105 More plugins can be found here:
106 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/plugins.php
112 The "actions" feature is a convenient way for the user to launch external
113 commands to process a complete message file including headers and body or
114 just one of its parts. It allows also the use of an external command to
115 filter the whole text or just a selected part in the message window or in
116 the compose window. This is a generic tool that allows to do any uncommon
117 actions on the messages, and thus extends the possibilities of Sylpheed.
118 For example, Sylpheed does not include the rot13 cyphering algorithm
119 popular in some newsgroups. It does not support natively armored
120 encryption or clear signing. It does not support uuencoded messages. As
121 all these features can be handled by external programs, the actions
122 provide a convenient way to use them from the menu bar.
127 To create a new action, go to Configuration -> Actions.... The "Action
128 Creation" dialog offers to enter the Menu name that will trigger the
129 command. The created menu will be found in the Tools -> Actions submenu.
130 By inserting a slash / in the menu name, you create a submenu.
132 The command is entered in the Command line entry. Note that Sylpheed
133 stores every single email in a separate file. This allows to use the
134 following syntax for the command:
136 * %f denotes the file name of the selected message. If you selected more
137 than one, then the command will be launched for each message with
138 the appropriate file name
139 * %F denotes the list of the file names of the selected message. If only
140 one message is selected, this amounts to %f, but if more messages
141 are selected, then the command will be launched only once with the
142 list of the file names. (You can use both %f and %F in one command:
143 then the command will be launched for each selected message with
144 the name of this message and with the list of all selected
145 messages. I did not find a practical example for this.)
146 * %p denotes the current selected message part of a multipart message.
147 The part is decoded accordingly. If the message is not a multipart
148 message, it denotes the message body.
149 * Prepending >: this will allow you to send to the command's standard
150 input a text that you will enter in a dialog window.
151 * Prepending *: this will allow you to send to the command's standard
152 input a text that you will enter in a dialog window. But in
153 contrast to prepending >, the entered text is hidden (useful when
155 * Appending an ampersand &: this will run the command asynchronously.
156 That means "fire and forget". Sylpheed won't wait for the command
157 to finish, nor will it catch its output or its error messages.
158 * Prepending the vertical bar | (pipe-in): this will send the current
159 displayed text or the current selected text from the message view
160 or the compose window to the command standard input. The command
161 will silently fail if more than one message is selected.
162 * Appending the vertical bar | (pipe-out): this will replace the current
163 displayed text or the current selected text from the message window
164 or the compose window by the command standard output. The command
165 will silently fail if more than one message is selected.
167 Note: It is not possible to use actions containing %f, %F or %p from the
170 When a command is run, and unless it is run asynchronously, Sylpheed will
171 be insensitive to any interaction and it will wait for the command to
172 finish. If the command takes too long (5 seconds), it will popup a dialog
173 window allowing to stop it. This dialog will also be displayed as soon as
174 the command has some output: error messages or even its standard output
175 when the command is not a "pipe-out" command. When multiple commands are
176 being run, they are run in parallel and each command output is separated
177 from the outputs of the others.
182 Here are some examples that are listed in the same syntax as used for
183 storing the actions list. You can copy and past the definition in your
184 ~/.sylpheed/actionsrc file (exit Sylpheed before). The syntax is very
185 simple: one line per action, each action contains the menu name and the
186 command line separated by a colon and a space ": "
188 Purpose: rot13 cyphering
189 Definition: Rot13: |tr a-zA-Z n-za-mN-ZA-M|
190 Details: This will apply the rot13 cyphering algorithm to the
191 (selected) text in the message/compose view.
193 Purpose: Decoding uuencoded messages
194 Definition: UUdeview: xdeview %F&
195 Details: xdeview comes with uudeview. If an encoded file is split in
196 multiple messages, just select them all and run the command.
198 Purpose: Display uuencoded image
199 Definition: Display uuencoded: uudec %f&
200 Details: Displays uuencoded files. The uudec[1] script can be found in
201 the 'tools' directory of the distribution package.
203 Purpose: Alter messages
204 Definition: Edit message: gvim -f %F
205 Details: Allows editing of any received message. Can be used to remove
206 unneeded message parts, etc.
208 Purpose: Pretty format
209 Definition: Par: |par 72Tbgjqw74bEe B=._A_a 72bg|
210 Details: par is a utility that can pretty format any text. It does a
211 very good job in indenting quoted messages, and justifying
212 text. Used when composing a message
215 Definition: Part/Dillo: dillo %p&
216 Details: Browse the selected message part in Dillo.
219 Definition: GnuPG/Clear Sign: |gpg-sign-syl|
220 Details: Clear sign a message. The gpg-sign-syl[2] script is responsible
221 for asking the passphrase and for running gnupg.
223 Purpose: Verify Clear Signed
224 Definition: GnuPG/Verify: |gpg --no-tty --verify
225 Details: Verify clear signed messages. The result is displayed in the
226 actions output dialog.
228 Purpose: Decrypt ASCII Armored
229 Definition: GnuPG/Decrypt: *gpg --no-tty --command-fd 0 --passphrase-fd 0 --decrypt %f|
230 Details: Decrypt ASCII armored messages. The passphrase is entered
231 into the opened action's input dialog.
233 [1] The uudec script can be found in the 'tools' directory of the
234 distribution package. It needs uudecode and ImageMagick's display. The
235 latter can be replaced by any image viewer that can get input from
236 standard input. The script could also be modified to use temporary files
237 instead of standard input.
239 [2] The gpg-sign-syl script can be found in the 'tools' directory of the
240 distribution package.
246 Claws has support for different icon sets. Several icon sets can be
247 downloaded from http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/themes.php
248 You will need to create a directory called 'themes' in your config
249 directory, unpack them into this directory, and then use the interface
250 to select them, /Configuration/Preferences/Display/Themes
252 This interface can also be used to install new themes.
259 b. Configuration and installation
266 The spell checker in Sylpheed-Claws requires the GNU/aspell library
267 (http://www.gnu.org/software/aspell), version 0.50 or newer.
269 You also need the dictionaries. Check GNU/aspell home page for how
270 to download and install them.
272 NB: The old dictionaries used by the old aspell will not work.
277 Spell checking is enabled if you configure Claws appropriately. Add
278 the option '--enable-aspell' when configuring, e.g.:
280 ./configure --enable-aspell
282 The configure script needs the 'aspell' executable to be in your path.
283 If it is in unusual places, use '--with-aspell-prefix' to tell the path of
284 the aspell executable. E.g., if aspell's full path is
285 /foo/bar/bin/aspell, then use:
287 ./configure --enable-aspell --with-aspell-prefix=/foo/bar
289 The '--with-aspell-prefix=PREFIX' option will let the configure
290 script search for includes and libraries in PREFIX/include and PREFIX/lib.
292 You can also specify manually the includes and libraries path by using
293 either following options:
295 --with-aspell-includes=/foo/bar/include
299 --with-aspell-libs=/rab/oof/lib
303 The configure script summarizes the options compiled in. Check that
304 it lists 'GNU/aspell = yes'.
306 Then proceed as usual, with 'make' and 'make install'.
311 After successful compiling, you need to tell Sylpheed where your
312 dictionaries reside. The configure script should have found it,
313 but in case it did not, run 'aspell config dict-dir' on the
314 shell to get the path to the dictionaries.
316 Then run Sylpheed and go to /Configuration/Preferences/Compose/Spell Checker.
317 Check the box 'Enable spell checker' and use the file selector ('...' button)
318 to select the path where the dictionaries reside. Within the file selector,
319 go to that directory and select *any* file in the file lists. Click OK.
320 Then, you should be able to select your default dictionary.
322 When composing, misspelled words are highlighted. Click on any
323 highlighted word with the right mouse button to get a list of
324 suggestions. The first entry of the menu just displays the unknown
325 word. Selecting 'Accept in this session' (or hitting MOD1-Space,
326 where MOD1 is usually the ALT key) will ignore this word and accept
327 it in this message. Selecting the next entry, "Add to dictionary", which
328 is bound to MOD1-Enter combination, will add the unknown word to your
329 personal dictionary to learn it. The next entries are the suggested words.
330 The first 15 suggestions can be accessed by typing one of the first letters
331 of Latin alphabet (if this does not suit your language, please send
332 a mail to melvin.hadasht@free.fr). Aspell has a 'learn from mistake'
333 function that can be used by pressing the MOD1 key and selecting the
334 suggestion (with the keyboard or with the mouse). See GNU/aspell manual
335 §6.3 for an explanation of this feature (also called 'replacement storing').
337 If you click with the right mouse button everywhere else, or if you
338 shift-right-click even on a misspelled word, you get the
339 configuration menu. 'Check all' highlights all misspelled words.
340 With this menu, you can also change the dictionary while editing.
341 Finally, you can change the suggestion mode, and the learn from
344 Spell checking can also be done using keyboard shortcuts. In the
345 'Edit' menu of the compose window, there are two menus 'Check backwards
346 misspelled word' and 'Forward to next misspelled word'. Add to them
347 appropriate keyboard shortcuts. 'Check backwards misspelled word'
348 checks backwards from cursor position for the first misspelled word.
349 If it finds one, it displays the suggestions lists which can be handled
350 with the keyboard as described before. When the suggestion menu is
351 closed, the cursor returns to its original position to be able to
352 continue editing. The 'Forward to next misspelled word' do the same
353 thing in the other direction but moves the cursor at the end of the
354 misspelled word. This way, you can spell check easily a whole message
355 starting from its beginning and using the 'Forward to next misspelled
356 word' keyboard short cut.
360 6. Quick Search with extended search
361 ------------------------------------
362 Quick Search, with its powerful Extended search function,
363 enables searching through folder's messages.
365 Extended Search allows one to define criteria that messages must
366 have in order to match and be displayed in the summary view pane.
367 Search types titled From, Subject and To are self explanatory.
368 Search type extended allows one to use Sylpheed's powerful
369 filtering engine to select messages. Examples:
370 from regexpcase "foo"
371 subject regexp "Bug" & to regexp "sylpheed-claws"
373 Additionally, it is possible to use simpler yet equally
374 powerfull patterns for message selections. Mutt users will
375 immediately recognise most of the available patterns:
377 Pattern Parameter Selects
378 ----------------------------------------------------
380 ag # messages whose age is greater than #
381 al # messages whose age is lower than #
382 b S messages which contain S in the message body
383 B S messages which contain S in the whole message
384 c S messages carbon-copied to S
385 C S message is either to: or cc: to S
387 e S messages which contain S in the Sender field
388 E S true if execute "S" succeeds
389 f S messages originating from user S
391 h S messages which contain header S
392 i S messages which contain S in Message-Id header
393 I S messages which contain S in inreplyto header
395 n S messages which are in newsgroup S
398 r messages which have been replied to
400 s S messages which contain S in subject
401 se # messages whose score is equal to #
402 sg # messages whose score is greater than #
403 sl # messages whose score is lower than #
404 Se # messages whose size is equal to #
405 Sg # messages whose size is greater than #
406 Ss # messages whose size is smaller than #
407 t S messages which have been sent to S
410 x S messages which contain S in References header
411 y S messages which contain S in X-Label header
414 S means regexp string
416 It is possible to use logical operators AND (&), OR (|) and
417 NOT (! or ~). Case sensitive search is achieved with %.
421 f "john beavis" messages from john beavis
422 %f "John Beavis" messages from John Beavis (case sensitive)
423 ~s foo messages which do not have foo in the subject
424 f foo & ~s bar messages from foo that do not have bar in thesubject
431 '/Configuration/Preferences/Customize Toolbars' lets you define the
432 toolbar you want. The configuration dialog enables you to set an icon,
433 an appropriate text, and map an action to it. Actions to choose
434 from are predefined. You can also have your "Sylpheed Actions" (refer
435 to "Actions" above) on your toolbar.
438 * Configuration->Actions
439 - add an entry "Dillo: dillo %p&"
440 * Configuration->Custom toolbar
441 - select Sylpheed Actions Feature
442 - select "Dillo: dillo %p&" from drop down list
443 - choose an icon and click ok
447 8. Partial downloading of POP3 mails
448 ------------------------------------
449 Messages over the configured size limit, ('/[Account preferences]/
450 Receive/Message size limit'), will be partially retrieved. These
451 messages will have a Notice View displayed (above the Message View),
452 informing of the partially retrieved state and the total size of the
453 message. The Notice View will also contain two buttons, 'Mark for
454 download' and 'Mark for deletion'. If the user clicks 'Mark for
455 download', the message will be downloaded in full at the next message
456 retrieval, (and the partial one deleted); if the user checks 'Mark for
457 deletion' it will be removed from the server after the normal delay
458 as specified in the POP3 account's 'Receive' preferences.
459 If a user moves a partially retrieved message to the Trash folder
460 it will be deleted on the server at the next retrieval after the
461 Trash folder has been emptied.
466 9. Other things that Claws does differently
467 -------------------------------------------
468 Claws does a lot of things differently. Here is a quick run-down of
471 * auto address replacement in summary view
473 This matches a plain email address with a person in the address book.
474 This feature is enabled in '/Configuration/Preferences/Common/Display'
475 'Display sender using addressbook'
477 * manual selection of MIME types for attachments
479 You can change the MIME type of an attachment by right-clicking in the
480 attachment list, selecting Property in the menu. The MIME type list
481 is a combo box with the known MIME types.
483 * sharing mail folders
485 You can also share or use shared mail folders. Right-click a folder and
486 select Properties. Change the Folder chmod setting.
488 * simplify subject string
490 It is possible to remove parts of subject string from the displayed
493 True Subject: [Sylpheed-claws-users] This is a test
494 Displayed Subject: This is a test
495 Regexp: \[Sylpheed-claws-(devel|users)\]
497 This is a per folder property. Right click on a folder and select
498 Properties, enable Simplify Subject RegExp check box.
502 New cache is a new data cache structure for sylpheed, that will
503 solve many of the problems sylpheed currently has with updates to
504 flags. But you will also notice a large speed gain when you open
507 New cache uses two new configuration parameters that can be
508 adjusted in ~/[RCDIR]/sylpheedrc (no gui for them available yet).
510 cache_max_mem_usage (default: 4096)
511 the maximum kB of memory sylpheed should use.
512 It will try to keep the memory usage below this
513 value, but it will always use the assigned
514 amount of memory for speed gain.
516 cache_min_keep_time (default: 15)
517 the minimum time in minutes sylpheed will keep
518 the folder cache in memory. If a cache is more
519 recent than this time it will not be freed even
520 if the memory usage is above the maximum. You
521 should probably set this value higher than your
522 mail check interval. Otherwise the cache will
523 always be freed between checks even if the folder
524 is accessed on every check, which will cause much
527 The check if memory can be freed is currently done after the
528 active folder has been changed or whenever a new cache is read,
529 i.e. triggered by mail incorporation.
531 New mails in MH folders are not detected automatically like before,
532 when you enter the folder. You have to update the folder manually,
533 or activate the auto update setting in the options.
535 * SMTP Message Size Declaration
536 If the server supports it, oversize messages will not be sent and
537 the maximum allowed message size will be displayed in the log,
538 (/Tools/Log window/).
541 Clicking on the replied icon in the Status (S) column of the summary
542 view will attempt to find and display your reply that is stored in
545 * pop before smtp authentication
547 * Automatic saving of message when composing
549 * signature in the message view can be coloured
551 * built-in gdb crash handler
553 * extra Font configuration
557 * 'hide read messages' feature
559 * Request Return-Receipt
561 * ability to change folder order
563 * 'ignore thread' marking
565 * message priority setting
567 * Automatic message drafting and cache saving on kill
569 * SSL certificate management and checking
571 * Indication of unread answers to marked mails:
572 '(!)' is appended to the folder name when a marked message
575 * address auto-completion includes a dynamic LDAP search
577 * address auro-completion works on nicknames and aliases
579 * Password encryption in config files is implemented using
580 unix encrypt and setkey functions.
582 This is not an exhaustive list.
588 You will find all of these tools in the 'tools' directory,
589 see tools/README for further information:
592 import mbox files exported by calypso
594 convert mbox format to MH format
596 convert a Eudora (v.3?) addressbook to vCard
599 convert Sylpheed's filter rules, (< 0.9.99), into
600 Claws' filtering format
602 Actions script to lookup the selected text on
603 Freshmeat www.freshmeat.net using the configured
606 convert a gif file to an xface
608 Actions script to lookup selected message-id on
609 google using mozilla.
611 Actions script to lookup up the selected text on
612 google using the configured browser
614 GnuPG cleartext-signing script for use with
617 convert a Kmail addressbook to a Claws addressbook
619 new version of the address book conversion script
620 for newer versions of Kmail/Kaddressbook
622 convert a maildir format mailbox into MH format
624 search any searchable website for the selected text
626 enables sending files from the Nautilus file manager
629 enable OpenOffice to send documents through Claws
631 convert an Outlook contacts list to a Claws addressbook
633 enable quick-switching between Claws and Sylpheed
634 in a non-destructive way
636 process a Claws mail and print it using enscript if
637 available or lpr if not
639 convert an addressbook exported from The Bat! into a
642 attempt to view an attachment as plain text
644 translators' tool that eases the creation of *.po files
646 decode UUencoded mails, for use with Actions
648 Service Menus for Konqueror to allow attaching files and
649 compressing/attaching files/directories to a new Compose
654 11. Switching from Sylpheed to Sylpheed-Claws
655 ---------------------------------------------
657 Sylpheed-Claws uses many of the same settings as Sylpheed and, by
658 default, the same configuration directory. Therefore, it is possible
659 to simply install Claws and continue as usual.
661 However, if you wish to preserve your Sylpheed settings, simply copy
662 Sylpheed's configuration directory to a new location, and use the
663 ./configure option --with-config-dir=RCDIR when building Claws.
666 cp -r .sylpheed .sylpheed-claws
667 cd [Sylpheed-Claws source directory]
668 ./configure --with-config-dir=.sylpheed-claws
670 Sylpheed and Claws, by default, both share the same executable name,
671 'sylpheed', so if you want to have them both installed you can, for
672 example, pass a prefix to the ./configure script, or use
673 --program-suffix=SUFFIX
675 ./configure --prefix=/usr
677 ./configure --program-suffix=-claws
680 Certain features that are built into Sylpheed are available as
681 plugins in Claws, for example, image viewing and GnuPG support.
682 To enable these features you will need to load the plugins.
683 Go to '/Configuration/Plugins' and click 'Load Plugin'. Then
684 select the plugin file (ending in .so) that you want to load.
685 Configuration options for the plugins can be found in
686 'Configuration/Preferences'. (See the Plugins section of this
687 document for further details.)
690 Claws uses a different Filtering system from Sylpheed and your
691 Sylpheed filter settings will not be used. In subdirectory tools/
692 of the distribution there is a Perl script called filter_conv.pl
693 which converts old Sylpheed filter rules to the Claws filtering
694 system, see tools/README for details. Currently this only supports
695 conversion from Sylpheed's old filtering system, < 0.9.99.
698 The toolbar contains a composite button for both composing mail and
699 news. It is toggled between composing mail and news automatically when
700 a mail or news folder is selected.
704 12. How to contribute
705 ---------------------
707 You are encourged to send patches via the Sylpheed-Claws sourceforge
708 project's Patch Tracker.
709 http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?atid=384600&group_id=25528&func=browse
711 If that's too troublesome, either contact Paul Mangan
712 <twb@users.sourceforge.net> or consider posting to the
713 Sylpheed-Claws-users mailing list.
714 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/sylpheed-claws-users
716 Bugs can be reported with Claws' bugzilla at:
717 http://www.thewildbeast.co.uk/sylpheed-claws/bugzilla/index.cgi
719 Of course, you can also post to the Sylpheed-Claws-users mailing list.
721 Also, we really try to incorporate good contributions, but sometimes we
722 don't have enough time. If the contribution is really big, or requires
723 a long time to stabilise, send a mail to Paul Mangan
724 <twb@users.sourceforge.net>. We can probably arrange access to the
725 Sylpheed-Claws CVS tree.
729 13. How to request features
730 ---------------------------
732 Ask around in Sylpheed-Claws-users ML. Note that some developers may
733 have already thought about your feature, may,perhaps, be implementing it,
734 or the feature was already discussed and rejected for whatever reason.
735 You might want to go ahead and hack a patch for it. (That would be very
736 cool!) Another possibility is to use the Feature Request Tracker at the
738 http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=25528&atid=384601
742 14. Installing Claws from CVS
743 -----------------------------
748 To download the latest cvs cd to the directory where you wish to download
749 to and type the following information:
751 cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/sylpheed-claws login
753 When prompted for a password press the RETURN key.
754 After anonymously logging in:
756 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/sylpheed-claws co sylpheed-claws
762 To compile and install use the following commands:
764 ./autogen.sh [add configure options as required]
766 make install [as root]
768 You will need a full set of development tools installed to be able to run
769 autogen.sh. Also see ac/README.
780 2004-05-31 0.9.11claws
781 2004-03-08 0.9.10claws
782 2004-02-06 0.9.9claws
783 2003-12-19 0.9.8claws
784 2003-11-26 0.9.7claws
785 2003-10-02 0.9.6claws
786 2003-09-10 0.9.5claws
787 2003-08-04 0.9.4claws
788 2003-07-12 0.9.3claws
789 2003-05-24 0.9.0claws
790 2003-03-12 0.8.11claws
791 2003-02-12 0.8.10claws
792 2003-01-24 0.8.9claws
793 2002-12-26 0.8.8claws
794 2002-12-23 0.8.7claws
795 2002-11-25 0.8.6claws
796 2002-10-07 0.8.5claws
797 2002-09-22 0.8.3claws
798 2002-08-28 0.8.2claws
799 2002-07-30 0.8.1claws
800 2002-07-23 0.8.0claws
801 2002-06-15 0.7.8claws
802 2002-05-18 0.7.6claws
803 2002-04-28 0.7.5claws
804 2002-03-11 0.7.4claws
805 2002-02-19 0.7.2claws
806 2002-02-14 0.7.1claws
807 2002-01-14 0.7.0claws
808 2001-12-16 0.6.6claws
809 2001-10-16 0.6.5claws8
810 2001-09-30 0.6.2claws
811 2001-08-14 0.6.1claws
812 2001-07-13 0.5.1claws
813 2001-07-01 0.5.0claws3
814 2001-06-16 0.4.99claws
815 2001-05-29 0.4.99claws3
816 2001-05-11 0.4.67claws1
823 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/
824 Sylpheed-Claws for Windows homepage
825 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/win32/
827 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/phpwiki/
829 http://sourceforge.net/projects/sylpheed-claws/
831 http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=25528
833 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/plugins.php
835 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/themes.php
837 http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/sylpheed-claws/sylpheed-claws/
838 Users Mailing List subscription page
839 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/sylpheed-claws-users/
840 Users Mailing List archive
841 http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum=sylpheed-claws-users/
842 Commits Announcement List subscription page
843 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/sylpheed-claws-commits/
844 Commits Announcement List archive
845 http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum=sylpheed-claws-commits/
847 http://www.thewildbeast.co.uk/sylpheed-claws/bugzilla/index.cgi
848 Feature Request Tracker
849 http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=25528&atid=384601
851 http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=25528&atid=384600
852 Internationalisation Status
853 http://sylpheed-claws.sourceforge.net/i18n.php
855 http://sylpheed.good-day.net