aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorBence Ferdinandy <bence@ferdinandy.com>2024-03-13 13:56:54 +0100
committerRobin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>2024-03-25 23:10:21 +0100
commit523ca15a3b4882a4e49eb4736cc2d5d11b8df9a7 (patch)
treeaac3f29b13397fcca98556f60429ed10e0b63852
parent7bddae827a3aaab196b897adadd1d4999fe11b1c (diff)
downloadaerc-523ca15a3b4882a4e49eb4736cc2d5d11b8df9a7.tar.gz
aerc-523ca15a3b4882a4e49eb4736cc2d5d11b8df9a7.zip
docs: update filter tips for images
Since aerc uses vaxis, the image/* filter has incorrect information. Update this with the new behaviour. Fixes: 4e26faf498b8 ("msgviewer: implement inline image viewing") Signed-off-by: Bence Ferdinandy <bence@ferdinandy.com> Reviewed-by: Inwit <inwit@sindominio.net> Acked-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
-rw-r--r--doc/aerc-config.5.scd16
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/aerc-config.5.scd b/doc/aerc-config.5.scd
index ea931675..b26d7695 100644
--- a/doc/aerc-config.5.scd
+++ b/doc/aerc-config.5.scd
@@ -1064,15 +1064,17 @@ _application/pdf_
https://www.xpdfreader.com/pdftotext-man.html
_image/\*_
+
This is a tricky topic. It's possible to display images in a terminal,
but for high resolution images the terminal you are using either needs
- to support sixels or the kitty terminal graphics protocol.
- Unfortunately, aerc's built-in terminal supports neither, so only highly
- pixelated images can be shown natively. A workaround is possible by
- asking the terminal to draw on top of aerc and then remove the image
- when done viewing.
-
- The built-in terminal can show pixelated images with *catimg*(1):
+ to support sixels or the kitty terminal graphics protocol. The built-in
+ terminal emulator of aerc (via the TUI library Vaxis) supports both.
+ Furthermore if you don't set any filter for images, Vaxis will figure
+ out what your terminal emulator supports and either use sixels, kitty
+ graphics, or fall back to a pixelated half-block. You can turn this
+ feature off, by setting a filter that is essentially no-op.
+
+ You can still set a specific filter, e.g *catimg*(1):
```
image/\*=catimg -w$(tput cols) -