Hi Mark, * Mark Walters <markwalters1009@gmail.com> [2016-07-15; 22:31]: > This allows the user to reply to calendar parts. To reply go to the > text/calendar part and use ". c", then select accept, decline, or > tentative. Notmuch gives a reply buffer ready to send as the response. > For the moment this must be sent manually (C-c C-c as normal). > --- > > This is a first pass at allowing the user to reply to calendar > invites. Emacs (at least emacs 24) has gnus-icalendar which contains > all the things necessary for gnus to reply to calendar parts. This > wraps some of the functions for gnus-icalendar so they work from notmuch. > > This version does not send the reply automatically, so it is possible > to review the reply before sending. > > It appears to work with google calendar and outlook invites, but is > not heavily tested. Please do not use for "important" things! > > If people find it works then I will think about how to polish > it. Feedback of any sort very gratefully received! I sent me an calendar invitation via the Open Exchange web interface, was able to reply within notmuch, Open Exchange recognised the reply as containing a date. Open Exchange showed a button to accept changes to the calendar, when I click on this button a notification appears, stating that the appointment was actualised. So I think your patch mostly works. But sadly in Open Exchenge the calendar the status of the appointment stays the same: There is no hint, that the invitation was replied to, neither "accept" nor "decline" appear there: The person who created the appointment is shown with a checked checkbox in color green, such a sign does not show up for the person who was invited. I cannot say who is to blame for this, since I don't know the first thing about this. I could provide the accept/decline mails if needed. Thanks for your patch, I wished for such functionality in notmuch. Ciao; Gregor _______________________________________________ notmuch mailing list notmuch@notmuchmail.org https://notmuchmail.org/mailman/listinfo/notmuch