1aerc-config(5)                File Formats Manual               aerc-config(5)
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4

NAME

6       aerc-config - configuration file formats for aerc(1)
7

CONFIGURATION

9       There are three aerc config files: aerc.conf, binds.conf, and ac‐
10       counts.conf. The last one must be kept secret, as it may include your
11       account credentials. We look for these files in your XDG config home
12       plus "aerc", which defaults to ~/.config/aerc.
13
14       Examples of these config files are typically included with your instal‐
15       lation of aerc and are usually installed in /usr/share/aerc.
16
17       Each file uses the ini format, and consists of sections with keys and
18       values. A line beginning with # is considered a comment and ignored, as
19       are empty lines. New sections begin with [section-name] on a single
20       line, and keys and values are separated with "=".
21

AERC.CONF

23       This file is used for configuring the general appearance and behavior
24       of aerc.
25
26   GENERAL OPTIONS
27       These options are configured in the [general] section of aerc.conf.
28
29       default-save-path
30           Used as a default path for save operations if no other path is
31           specified.
32
33       pgp-provider
34           If set to "gpg", aerc will use system gpg binary and keystore for
35           all crypto operations. Otherwise, the internal openpgp implemena‐
36           tion will be used.
37
38           Default: internal
39
40       unsafe-accounts-conf
41           By default, the file permissions of accounts.conf must be restric‐
42           tive and only allow reading by the file owner (0600). Set this op‐
43           tion to true to ignore this permission check. Use this with care as
44           it may expose your credentials.
45
46           Default: false
47
48   UI OPTIONS
49       These options are configured in the [ui] section of aerc.conf.
50
51       index-format
52           Describes the format for each row in a mailbox view. This field is
53           compatible with mutt's printf-like syntax.
54
55           Default: %D %-17.17n %s
56
57       ┌─────────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
58Format specifier Description                
59       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
60       │       %%        │ literal %                  │
61       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
62       │       %a        │ sender address             │
63       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
64       │       %A        │ reply-to address, or       │
65       │                 │ sender address if none     │
66       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
67       │       %C        │ message number             │
68       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
69       │       %d        │ formatted message time‐    │
70       │                 │ stamp                      │
71       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
72       │       %D        │ formatted message time‐    │
73       │                 │ stamp converted to local   │
74       │                 │ timezone                   │
75       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
76       │       %f        │ sender name and address    │
77       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
78       │       %F        │ author name, or recipient  │
79       │                 │ name if the message is     │
80       │                 │ from you. The address is   │
81       │                 │ shown if no name part.     │
82       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
83       │       %g        │ message labels (for exam‐  │
84       │                 │ ple notmuch tags)          │
85       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
86       │       %i        │ message id                 │
87       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
88       │       %n        │ sender name, or sender ad‐ │
89       │                 │ dress if none              │
90       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
91       │       %r        │ comma-separated list of    │
92       │                 │ formatted recipient names  │
93       │                 │ and addresses              │
94       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
95       │       %R        │ comma-separated list of    │
96       │                 │ formatted CC names and ad‐ │
97       │                 │ dresses                    │
98       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
99       │       %s        │ subject                    │
100       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
101       │       %t        │ the (first) address the    │
102       │                 │ new email was sent to      │
103       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
104       │       %T        │ the account name which re‐ │
105       │                 │ ceived the email           │
106       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
107       │       %u        │ sender mailbox name (e.g.  │
108       │                 │ "smith" in "smith@exam‐    │
109       │                 │ ple.net")                  │
110       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
111       │       %v        │ sender first name (e.g.    │
112       │                 │ "Alex" in "Alex Smith      │
113       │                 │ <smith@example.net>")      │
114       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
115       │       %Z        │ flags (O=old, N=new, r=an‐ │
116       │                 │ swered, D=deleted,         │
117       │                 │ !=flagged, *=marked)       │
118       └─────────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
119       timestamp-format
120           See time.Time#Format at https://godoc.org/time#Time.Format
121
122           Default: "2006-01-02 03:04 PM" (ISO 8601 + 12 hour time)
123
124       this-day-time-format
125           Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent today.
126           If this is not specified, timestamp-format is used instead.
127
128           Default: "03:04 PM" (12 hour time)
129
130       this-week-time-format
131           Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent within
132           the last 7 days. If this is not specified, timestamp-format is used
133           instead.
134
135           Default: "Monday 03:04 PM" (Week day + 12 hour time)
136
137       this-year-time-format
138           Index-only time format for messages that were received/sent this
139           year. If this is not specified, timestamp-format is used instead.
140
141           Default: "January 02" (Month + month day)
142
143       sidebar-width
144           Width of the sidebar, including the border. Set to zero to disable
145           the sidebar.
146
147           Default: 20
148
149       empty-message
150           Message to display when viewing an empty folder.
151
152           Default: (no messages)
153
154       empty-dirlist
155           Message to display when no folders exists or are all filtered.
156
157           Default: (no folders)
158
159       mouse-enabled
160           Enable mouse events in the ui, e.g. clicking and scrolling with the
161           mousewheel
162
163           Default: false
164
165       new-message-bell
166           Ring the bell when a new message is received.
167
168           Default: true
169
170       pinned-tab-marker
171           Marker to show before a pinned tab's name.
172
173           Default: `
174
175       spinner
176           Animation shown while loading, split by spinner-delimiter (below)
177
178           Examples:
179           •   spinner = "-_-,_-_"
180           •   spinner = '. , .'
181           •   spinner = ",|,/,-"
182
183
184           Default: "[..]    , [..]   ,  [..]  ,   [..] ,    [..],   [..] ,
185           [..]  , [..]   "
186
187       spinner-delimiter
188           Spinner delimiter to split string into an animation
189
190           Default: ","
191
192       sort
193           List of space-separated criteria to sort the messages by, see sort
194           command in aerc(1) for reference. Prefixing a criterion with "-r "
195           reverses that criterion.
196
197           Example: "from -r date"
198
199           Default: ""
200
201       dirlist-format
202           Describes the format string to use for the directory list
203
204           Default: %n %>r
205
206       ┌─────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
207Format specifier Description               
208       ├─────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
209       │       %%        │ literal %                 │
210       ├─────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
211       │       %n        │ directory name            │
212       ├─────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
213       │       %N        │ compacted directory name  │
214       ├─────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
215       │       %r        │ recent/unseen/total mes‐  │
216       │                 │ sage count                │
217       ├─────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
218       │      %>X        │ make format specifier 'X' │
219       │                 │ be right justified        │
220       └─────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
221       dirlist-delay
222           Delay after which the messages are actually listed when entering a
223           directory. This avoids loading messages when skipping over folders
224           and makes the UI more responsive. If you do not want that, set it
225           to 0s.
226
227           Default: 200ms
228
229       dirlist-tree
230           Display the directory list as a foldable tree that allows to col‐
231           lapse and expand the folders.
232
233           Default: false
234
235       next-message-on-delete
236           Moves to next message when the current message is deleted
237
238           Default: true
239
240       completion-popovers
241           Shows potential auto-completions for text inputs in popovers.
242
243           Default: true
244
245       completion-delay
246           How long to wait after the last input before auto-completion is
247           triggered.
248
249           Default: 250ms
250
251       border-char-vertical border-char-horizontal
252           Set stylable characters (via the 'border' element) for vertical and
253           horizontal borders.
254
255           Default: spaces
256
257       stylesets-dirs
258           The directories where the stylesets are stored. The config takes a
259           colon-separated list of dirs. If this is unset or if a styleset
260           cannot be found, the following paths will be used as a fallback in
261           that order:
262
263               ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/stylesets
264               ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/stylesets
265               /usr/local/share/aerc/stylesets
266               /usr/share/aerc/stylesets
267
268           Default: ""
269
270       styleset-name
271           The name of the styleset to be used to style the ui elements. The
272           stylesets are stored in the 'stylesets' directory in the config di‐
273           rectory.
274
275           Default: default
276
277           Have a look at aerc-stylesets(7) as to how a styleset looks like.
278
279       fuzzy-complete
280           When typing a command or option, the popover will now show not only
281           the items /starting/ with the string input by the user, but it will
282           also show instances of items /containing/ the string, starting at
283           any position and need not be consecutive characters in the command
284           or option.
285
286       threading-enabled
287           Enable a threaded viewing of messages, works with IMAP (when
288           there's server support) and NotMuch backends.
289
290           This option should only be set to true for specific accounts ac‐
291           cordingly. See Contextual UI Configuration below.
292
293           If this is not supported by the server, you can enable it on the
294           fly by issuing the :toggle-threads command. The threading will be
295           done client side instead of on the server.
296
297           Default: false
298
299   Contextual UI Configuration
300       The UI configuration can be specialized for accounts, specific mail di‐
301       rectories and message subjects. The specializations are added using
302       contextual config sections based on the context.
303
304       The contextual UI configuration is merged to the base UiConfig in the
305       following order: Base UIConfig > Account Context > Folder Context >
306       Subject Context.
307
308       [ui:account=<AccountName>]
309           Adds account specific configuration with the account name.
310
311       [ui:folder=<FolderName>]
312           Add folder specific configuration with the folder name.
313
314       [ui:folder~<Regex>]
315           Add folder specific configuration for folders whose names match the
316           regular expression.
317
318       [ui:subject~<Regex>]
319           Add specialized ui configuration for messages that match a given
320           regular expression.
321
322       Example:
323           [ui:account=Work]
324           sidebar-width=...
325
326           [ui:folder=Sent]
327           index-format=...
328
329           [ui:folder~Archive/d+/.*]
330           index-format=...
331
332           [ui:subject~^[PATCH]
333           index-format=...
334
335   STATUSLINE
336       These options are configured in the [statusline] section of aerc.conf.
337
338       render-format
339           Describes the format string for the statusline format.
340
341           For a minimal statusline that only shows the current account and
342           the connection information, use [%a] %c.
343
344           To completely mute the statusline (except for push notficiations),
345           use %m only.
346
347           Default: [%a] %S %>%T
348
349       ┌─────────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
350Format specifier Description                
351       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
352       │       %%        │ literal %                  │
353       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
354       │       %a        │ active account name        │
355       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
356       │       %d        │ active directory name      │
357       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
358       │       %c        │ connection state           │
359       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
360       │       %m        │ mute statusline and show   │
361       │                 │ only push notifications    │
362       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
363       │       %S        │ general status information │
364       │                 │ (e.g. connection state,    │
365       │                 │ filter, search)            │
366       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
367       │       %T        │ general on/off information │
368       │                 │ (e.g. passthrough, thread‐ │
369       │                 │ ing, sorting)              │
370       ├─────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
371       │       %>        │ does not print anything    │
372       │                 │ but all format specifier   │
373       │                 │ that follow will be right  │
374       │                 │ justified.                 │
375       └─────────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
376       separator
377           Specifies the separator between grouped statusline elements (e.g.
378           for the %S and %T specifiers in render-format).
379
380           Default: " | "
381
382       display-mode
383           Defines the mode for displaying the status elements. Options: text,
384           icon
385
386           Default: text
387
388   VIEWER
389       These options are configured in the [viewer] section of aerc.conf.
390
391       pager
392           Specifies the pager to use when displaying emails. Note that some
393           filters may add ANSI escape sequences to add color to rendered
394           emails, so you may want to use a pager which supports ANSI.
395
396           Default: less -R
397
398       alternatives
399           If an email offers several versions (multipart), you can configure
400           which mimetype to prefer. For example, this can be used to prefer
401           plaintext over HTML emails.
402
403           Default: text/plain,text/html
404
405       header-layout
406           Defines the default headers to display when viewing a message. To
407           display multiple headers in the same row, separate them with a
408           pipe, e.g. "From|To". Rows will be hidden if none of their speci‐
409           fied headers are present in the message.
410
411           Default: From|To,Cc|Bcc,Date,Subject
412
413       show-headers
414           Default setting to determine whether to show full headers or only
415           parsed ones in message viewer.
416
417           Default: false
418
419       always-show-mime
420           Whether to always show the mimetype of an email, even when it is
421           just a single part.
422
423           Default: false
424
425   COMPOSE
426       These options are configured in the [compose] section of aerc.conf.
427
428       editor
429           Specifies the command to run the editor with. It will be shown in
430           an embedded terminal, though it may also launch a graphical window
431           if the environment supports it. Defaults to $EDITOR, or vi(1).
432
433       header-layout
434           Defines the default headers to display when composing a message. To
435           display multiple headers in the same row, separate them with a
436           pipe, e.g. "To|From".
437
438           Default: To|From,Subject
439
440       address-book-cmd
441           Specifies the command to be used to tab-complete email addresses.
442           Any occurrence of "%s" in the address-book-cmd will be replaced
443           with anything the user has typed after the last comma.
444
445           The command must output the completions to standard output, one
446           completion per line. Each line must be tab-delimited, with an email
447           address occurring as the first field. Only the email address field
448           is required. The second field, if present, will be treated as the
449           contact name. Additional fields are ignored.
450
451           Example:
452               khard email --remove-first-line --parsable '%s'
453
454           Default: none
455
456       reply-to-self
457           Allow to include your own address. Otherwise, if set to false, do
458           not mail yourself when replying (e.g., if replying to emails previ‐
459           ously sent by yourself, address your replies to the original To:
460           and Cc:).
461
462           Default: true
463
464   FILTERS
465       Filters allow you to pipe an email body through a shell command to ren‐
466       der certain emails differently, e.g. highlighting them with ANSI escape
467       codes. They are configured in the [filters] section of aerc.conf.
468
469       The first filter which matches the email's mimetype will be used, so
470       order them from most to least specific.
471
472       You can also match on non-mimetypes, by prefixing with the header to
473       match against (non-case-sensitive) and a comma, e.g. subject,text will
474       match a subject which contains "text". Use header,~regex to match
475       against a regex.
476
477       aerc ships with some default filters installed in the share directory
478       (usually /usr/share/aerc/filters). Note that these may have additional
479       dependencies that aerc does not have alone.
480
481   TRIGGERS
482       Triggers specify commands to execute when certain events occur.
483
484       They are configured in the [triggers] section of aerc.conf.
485
486       new-email
487           Executed when a new email arrives in the selected folder.
488
489           e.g. new-email=exec notify-send "New email from %n" "%s"
490
491           Default: ""
492
493           Format specifiers from index-format are expanded with respect to
494           the new message.
495
496   TEMPLATES
497       Templates are used to populate the body of an email. The compose, reply
498       and forward commands can be called with the -T flag with the name of
499       the template name.
500
501       aerc ships with some default templates installed in the share directory
502       (usually /usr/share/aerc/templates).
503
504       These options are configured in the [templates] section of aerc.conf.
505
506       template-dirs
507           The directory where the templates are stored. The config takes a
508           colon-separated list of dirs. If this is unset or if a template
509           cannot be found, the following paths will be used as a fallback in
510           that order:
511
512               ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-~/.config}/aerc/templates
513               ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-~/.local/share}/aerc/templates
514               /usr/local/share/aerc/templates
515               /usr/share/aerc/templates
516
517           Default: ""
518
519       new-message
520           The default template to be used for new messages.
521
522           Default: "new_message"
523
524       quoted-reply
525           The default template to be used for quoted replies.
526
527           Default: "quoted_reply"
528
529       forwards
530           The default template to be used for forward as body.
531
532           Default: "forward_as_body"
533

ACCOUNTS.CONF

535       This file is used for configuring each mail account used for aerc. Each
536       section is the name of an account you want to configure, and the keys &
537       values in that section specify details of that account's configuration.
538       In addition to the options documented here, specific transports for in‐
539       coming and outgoing emails may have additional configuration parame‐
540       ters, documented on their respective man pages.
541
542       Note that many of these configuration options are written for you, such
543       as source and outgoing, when you run the account configuration wizard
544       (:new-account).
545
546       archive
547           Specifies a folder to use as the destination of the :archive com‐
548           mand.
549
550           Default: Archive
551
552       copy-to
553           Specifies a folder to copy sent mails to, usually "Sent".
554
555           Default: none
556
557       default
558           Specifies the default folder to open in the message list when aerc
559           configures this account.
560
561           Default: INBOX
562
563       folders
564           Specifies the comma separated list of folders to display in the
565           sidebar. Names prefixed with ~ are interpreted as regular expres‐
566           sions.
567
568           Default: all folders
569
570       folders-exclude
571           Specifies the comma separated list of folders to exclude from the
572           sidebar. Names prefixed with ~ are interpreted as regular expres‐
573           sions. Note that this overrides anything from folders.
574
575           Default: no folders
576
577       enable-folders-sort
578           If true, folders are sorted, first by specified folders (see fold‐
579           ers-sort), then alphabetically.
580
581           Default: true
582
583       folders-sort
584           Specifies a comma separated list of folders to be shown at the top
585           of the list in the provided order. Remaining folders will be sorted
586           alphabetically.
587
588           Default: none
589
590       from
591           The default value to use for the From header in new emails. This
592           should be an RFC 5322-compatible string, such as "Your Name
593           <you@example.org>".
594
595           Default: none
596
597       aliases
598           All aliases of the current account. These will be used to fill in
599           the From: field. Make sure that your email server accepts this
600           value, or for example use aerc-sendmail(5) in combination with
601           msmtp and --read-envelope-from.
602
603           Default: none
604
605       outgoing
606           Specifies the transport for sending outgoing emails on this ac‐
607           count.  It should be a connection string, and the specific meaning
608           of each component varies depending on the protocol in use.  See
609           each protocol's man page for more details:
610
611aerc-smtp(5)
612
613
614       outgoing-cred-cmd
615           Specifies an optional command that is run to get the outgoing ac‐
616           count's password. See each protocol's man page for more details.
617
618           Default: none
619
620       pgp-auto-sign
621           If true, all outgoing emails from this account will be signed (if a
622           signing key is available)
623
624           Default: false
625
626       pgp-key-id
627           Specify the key id to use when signing a message. Can be either
628           short or long key id. If unset, aerc will look up the key by email
629
630       pgp-opportunistic-encrypt
631           If true, any outgoing email from this account will be encrypted
632           when all recipients (including "cc" and "bcc" field) have a public
633           key available in the keyring
634
635           Default: false
636
637       postpone
638           Specifies the folder to save postponed messages to.
639
640           Default: Drafts
641
642       source
643           Specifies the source for reading incoming emails on this account.
644           This key is required for all accounts. It should be a connection
645           string, and the specific meaning of each component varies depending
646           on the protocol in use. See each protocol's man page for more de‐
647           tails:
648
649aerc-imap(5)
650aerc-maildir(5)
651aerc-notmuch(5)
652
653
654           Default: none
655
656       source-cred-cmd
657           Specifies an optional command that is run to get the source ac‐
658           count's password. See each protocol's man page for more details.
659
660       signature-file
661           Specifies the file to read in order to obtain the signature to be
662           added to emails sent from this account.
663
664       signature-cmd
665           Specifies the command to execute in sh in order to obtain the sig‐
666           nature to be added to emails sent from this account. If the command
667           fails then signature-file is used instead.
668

BINDS.CONF

670       This file is used for configuring keybindings used in the aerc interac‐
671       tive client. You may configure different keybindings for different con‐
672       texts by writing them into different [sections] of the ini file. The
673       available contexts are:
674
675       [messages]
676           keybindings for the message list
677
678       [view]
679           keybindings for the message viewer
680
681       [view::passthrough]
682           keybindings for the viewer, when in key passthrough mode (toggled
683           with :toggle-key-passthrough)
684
685       [compose]
686           keybindings for the message composer
687
688       [compose::editor]
689           keybindings for the composer, when the editor is focused
690
691       [compose::review]
692           keybindings for the composer, when reviewing the email before it's
693           sent
694
695       [terminal]
696           keybindings for terminal tabs
697
698       You may also configure account specific key bindings for each context:
699
700       [context:account=<AccountName>]
701           keybindings for this context and account, where <AccountName>
702           matches the account name you provided in accounts.conf.
703
704       Example:
705           [messages:account=Mailbox]
706           c = :cf path:mailbox/** and<space>
707
708           [compose::editor:account=Mailbox2]
709           ...
710
711       You may also configure global keybindings by placing them at the begin‐
712       ning of the file, before specifying any context-specific sections. For
713       each key=value option specified, the key is the keystrokes pressed (in
714       order) to invoke this keybinding, and value specifies keystrokes that
715       aerc will simulate when the keybinding is invoked. Generally this is
716       used to execute commands, for example:
717
718           rq = :reply -q<Enter>
719
720       Pressing r, then q, will simulate typing in ":reply -q<Enter>", and ex‐
721       ecute :reply -q accordingly. It is also possible to invoke keybindings
722       recursively in a similar fashion. Additionally, the following special
723       options are available in each binding context:
724
725       $noinherit
726           If set to "true", global keybindings will not be effective in this
727           context.
728
729           Default: false
730
731       $ex
732           This can be set to a keystroke which will bring up the command in‐
733           put in this context.
734
735           Default: <semicolon>
736
737       In addition to letters, special keys may be specified in <angle brack‐
738       ets>. The following special keys are supported:
739
740       ┌──────────┬─────────────┐
741Name      Description 
742       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
743       │space     │     " "     │
744       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
745       │semicolon │      ;      │
746       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
747       │tab       │             │
748       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
749       │enter     │             │
750       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
751       │up        │             │
752       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
753       │c-up      │   Ctrl+Up   │
754       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
755       │down      │             │
756       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
757       │c-down    │  Ctrl+Down  │
758       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
759       │right     │             │
760       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
761       │c-right   │ Ctrl+Right  │
762       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
763       │left      │             │
764       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
765       │c-left    │  Ctrl+Left  │
766       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
767       │pgup      │             │
768       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
769       │c-pgup    │ Ctrl+PageUp │
770       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
771       │pgdn      │             │
772       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
773       │c-pgdn    │ Ctrl+PageUp │
774       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
775       │home      │             │
776       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
777       │end       │             │
778       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
779       │insert    │             │
780       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
781       │delete    │             │
782       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
783       │exit      │             │
784       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
785       │cancel    │             │
786       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
787       │print     │             │
788       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
789       │pause     │             │
790       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
791       │backtab   │             │
792       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
793       │c-space   │ Ctrl+Space  │
794       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
795       │c-a       │   Ctrl+a    │
796       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
797       │c-b       │   Ctrl+b    │
798       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
799       │c-c       │   Ctrl+c    │
800       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
801       │c-d       │   Ctrl+d    │
802       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
803       │c-e       │   Ctrl+e    │
804       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
805       │c-f       │   Ctrl+f    │
806       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
807       │c-g       │   Ctrl+g    │
808       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
809       │c-h       │   Ctrl+h    │
810       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
811       │c-i       │   Ctrl+i    │
812       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
813       │c-j       │   Ctrl+j    │
814       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
815       │c-k       │   Ctrl+k    │
816       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
817       │c-l       │   Ctrl+l    │
818       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
819       │c-m       │   Ctrl+m    │
820       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
821       │c-n       │   Ctrl+n    │
822       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
823       │c-o       │   Ctrl+o    │
824       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
825       │c-p       │   Ctrl+p    │
826       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
827       │c-q       │   Ctrl+q    │
828       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
829       │c-r       │   Ctrl+r    │
830       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
831       │c-s       │   Ctrl+s    │
832       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
833       │c-t       │   Ctrl+t    │
834       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
835       │c-u       │   Ctrl+u    │
836       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
837       │c-v       │   Ctrl+v    │
838       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
839       │c-w       │   Ctrl+w    │
840       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
841       │c-x       │   Ctrl+x    │
842       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
843       │c-y       │   Ctrl+y    │
844       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
845       │c-z       │   Ctrl+z    │
846       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
847       │c-]       │   Ctrl+]    │
848       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
849       │c-[       │   Ctrl+[    │
850       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
851       │c-^       │   Ctrl+^    │
852       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
853       │c-_       │   Ctrl+_    │
854       └──────────┴─────────────┘
855

SEE ALSO

857       aerc(1) aerc-imap(5) aerc-smtp(5) aerc-maildir(5) aerc-sendmail(5)
858       aerc-notmuch(5) aerc-stylesets(7)
859

AUTHORS

861       Originally created by Drew DeVault <sir@cmpwn.com> and maintained by
862       Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc> who is assisted by other open source con‐
863       tributors. For more information about aerc development, see
864       https://sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc/.
865
866
867
868                                  2022-06-18                    aerc-config(5)
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