similar to: Icedove (Thunderbird) crashes when reading IMAP messages

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 3000 matches similar to: "Icedove (Thunderbird) crashes when reading IMAP messages"

2008 Apr 25
1
icedove update
Something came up that Confounded problems in my move from UW-imap to dovecot. I found a problem with the new icedove update in Debian lenny when moving from 1.5.0.13+1.5.0.14b.dfsg1-0etch1 to 2.0.0.9-3 that could look like a dovecot issue. Icedove runs for a while but eventually quits updating the displayed email, yet appears to be working and busy trying to get messages from the server. I
2008 Apr 07
2
A little assistance with Sieve
With all the mess that my email has become, it makes sense for me to try to make use of Sieve, but I'm having quite the time finding out how to make it work. I'm running 1.0.13 on a Debian machine. Sieve appears to be compiled with it. I can access managesieve, and I have set up dovecot.conf with lda. I do not get a NO response when I PUTSCRIPI, but LISTSCRIPTS produces no result, so I
2008 May 05
1
Timeout when using icedove's searching on a large amount of email.
Hello list. I'm using dovecot as a local server, where I'm the only user (or so), and I appreciate using icedove searching functionality to roam through the whole inbox in search of some specific string in the body of my emails. Unfortunately, recently, such a search has become impossible, since the search takes too much time, and the connection times out. I've looked throughout the
2009 Jul 19
2
folder in dovecot
Hello, I'm quite new to dovecot, and I have some questions about folders. At the moment I've a script that use fetchmail + procmail to get mail from the isp, and save the mail in different folder. The idea is to save mail from different mailing list in different folder. Now I've installed dovecot so i can read mail from different computers, and i want to export all the folders. I
2011 Aug 25
3
On IMAP vhost login, only Username being used
Attempting IMAP SSL login on new installation, using Icedove (Debain Thunderbird variant), login fails. Logs show Dovecot attempting to match username only, not username with domain name, on Vpopmail user, so of course no match. Tried with '@' in full username, also with '%'. What's missing? Log shows: Aug 24 19:30:48 debian dovecot: auth: Debug: client in:
2017 Jul 20
3
Precision of values > 53 bits
> On 10 Jan 2013, at 15:56 , S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgcgroup.com> wrote: > > > >> I am working with large numbers and identified that R looses >> precision for such high numbers. > Yes. R uses standard 32-bit double precision. Well, for large values of 32... such as 64. -- Peter Dalgaard, Professor, Center for Statistics, Copenhagen Business School
2019 Aug 30
3
?Syntax wrong about `?`'s precedence ?
Precedence is a property of the parser and has nothing to do with the semantics assigned to various symbols. Using just core R functions you can see the precedence of '?' is between those of '=' and '<-'. > # '=' has lower precedence than '?' > str(as.list(parse(text="a ? b = c")[[1]])) List of 3 $ : symbol = $ : language `?`(a, b) $
2017 Jun 22
0
Hunting a histogram variant
?stem for something close and built in. Cheers, Bert Bert Gunter "The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along and sticking things into it." -- Opus (aka Berkeley Breathed in his "Bloom County" comic strip ) On Wed, Jun 21, 2017 at 9:01 PM, S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgcgroup.com> wrote: > > I'm looking for a histogram variant in
2019 Aug 30
1
?Syntax wrong about `?`'s precedence ?
...and 14955, which seems to have the explanation (but was marked as closed/fixed??). The parser does list '?' as lower precedence than '=', but '='-assignments are not normal 'expr's which can appear as arguments to '?'. (Presumably because of named arguments: f(a=b) differs from f(a<-b).) Other tokens which have lower precedence than assignments are
2010 Feb 02
2
Yield to Maturity using R
Dear R helpers,     Yesterday I had raised following query which was addressed by Mr Ellison. The query and the wonderful solution as provided by Mr. Ellison are as given below.    ## PROBLEM   I am calculating the 'Yield to Maturity' for the Bond with following characteristics.    Its a $1000 face value, 3 year bond with 10% annual coupon and is priced at 101. The yield to maturity can be
2011 Jan 17
1
median by geometric mean -- are we missing what's important?
Folks: I know this may be overreaching, but are we missing what's important? WHY do the zeros occur? Are they values less then a known or unknown LOD? -- and/or is there positive mass on zero? In either case, using logs to calculate a geometric mean may not make sense. Paraphrasing Greg Snow, what is the scientific question? What is the model? Cheers, Bert On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 9:13 AM,
2017 Aug 07
2
Latin hypercube sampling from a non-uniform distribution
Thanks for your answer. However, my variable is simulated from the cumulative distribution function of the Poisson distribution. So, the pattern obtained from the function "qpois" is not the same as the observed pattern (i.e., obtained from the function "ppois") set.seed(5) mortality_probability <- round(ppois(seq(0, 7, by = 1), lambda = 0.9), 2)
2017 Jul 25
0
Precision of values > 53 bits
What an impressively zombified thread. Though wondering how 53 bits were supposed to fit into 32 might just warrant revivification. -- Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity. On July 20, 2017 5:33:34 AM PDT, peter dalgaard <pdalgd at gmail.com> wrote: > >> On 10 Jan 2013, at 15:56 , S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgcgroup.com> wrote: >> >> >> >>>
2008 Jan 29
1
Fortunes - was Re: [OT] vernacular names for circular diagrams
I did not write that. On Jan 29, 2008 9:05 AM, S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgc.co.uk> wrote: > >>> "Gabor Grothendieck" <ggrothendieck at gmail.com> 29/01/2008 12:35:27 > >>> > > As is common in human affairs, even > > the illusion of understanding is preferred to a lofty digression > upon > > why the audience does not understand.
2018 Nov 29
2
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 1:10 PM S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgcgroup.com> wrote: > > > > > plot(x=1:10, y=) > > > plot(x=1:10, y=, 10:1) > > > > > > In both cases, 'y=' is ignored. In the first, the plot is for y=NULL (so not > > 'missing' y) > > > In the second case, 10:1 is positionally matched to y despite the
2015 Oct 06
5
authorship and citation
> The former co-author contributed, so he is still author and probably copyright > holder and has to be listed among the authors, otherwise it would be a CRAN > policy violation ... It's a bit of a philosophical question right now, but at some point in a developing package's life - particularly one that starts small but is subsequently refactored in growth - there may be no code
2017 Sep 06
0
Interesting behavior of lm() with small, problematic data sets
Indeed (version-specific). With R 3.4.1 on linux, I get coefficients and residuals that are numerically exact, F-statistic = NaN, p-value = NA, R-squared = NaN, etc. All of which is what ought to happen, given that the response variable (y) is not actually variable. ---JRG John R. Gleason On 09/06/2017 09:10 AM, S Ellison wrote: >> I think what you're seeing is >>
2017 Jun 22
5
Hunting a histogram variant
I'm looking for a histogram variant in which data points are plotted as labelled rectangles 'piled up' to form a histogram. I've posted an example at https://www.dropbox.com/s/ozi8bhdn5kqaufm/labelled_histogram.png?dl=0 It seems to have a long pedigree, as I see it (as in this example) in documents going back beyond the '80s. But I've not seen it in recent textbooks. So it
2018 Nov 30
2
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
But the main point is where arguments are mixed together: > debugonce(plot.default) > plot(x=1:10, y=, 'l') ... Browse[2]> missing(y) [1] FALSE Browse[2]> y [1] "l" Browse[2]> type [1] "p" I think that's what I fall over mostly: that named, empty arguments behave entirely different from omitting them (", ,") And I definitely agree we need
2011 Mar 28
3
Windows build not running on r-forge
Please forgive any mis-post, and do feel free to point me to a more appropriate list if this isn't properly R-dev. I have a package on R-forge that shows correct linux and other *nix builds, but no windows build. The log for the patched version shows the error below, which appears to be due to a lack of /src files, a problem that does not halt the *nix builds. The package contains no