At 01:08 PM 5/11/97 GMT, Ben Parker wrote: >On Sun, 11 May 1997 17:32:02 -0400, Jan Howard <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > >> Subject: [LISTNAME] topic >>How can I put [LPT] in my subject line? > >several steps involved. > >1. GET your list header: GET listname (HEADER > >2. Add SUBJECTHDR to the Default-Options= line. This is only necessary if you want new subscribers to get it by default. It won't affect existing subscribers. >3. Add the line Subject-Tag= LPT (do not use [] brackets) This step is optional and can be skipped if you're willing to use the listname as the tag (which I presume most would prefer anyway). >4. PUT back your header to LISTSERV host. Steps 1 and 4 can be skipped unless you need 2 and/or 3. >5. send the command: SET listname SUBJECTHDR FOR *@* Bad idea this... some may have SHORTHDR set for reasons that may result in non-delivery of mail if you override it (e.g., mail hops problems). SUBJECTHDR *overrides* SHORTHDR; it's not an additional option. (Whether it should be is a side issue; the point is, it is not at present.) >6. post a msg to your list telling users what you have done and how to >turn it off if they should want to (SET listname NOSUBJ). Nope. There are various *HDR settings, but NOSUBJ isn't one of them unless I missed it. There are FULL, SHORT, IETF, and SUBJ. To "turn it off" you'd have to pick one of the others. (Most people on most lists are probably set to FULL, but that doesn't make it right for all.) I recommend: omit all 6 steps. SUBJECTHDR is there already on 1.8c or later lists (and is unavailable on earlier ones anyway), and the subscribers can use it without the list owner doing anything! Just post a message to your list telling users they can get this feature if they want it by issuing the "SET listname SUBJ" command (assuming you're at least version 1.8c). If you're not sure, try it on your own subscription before posting. Many people with semi-sophisticated mail filters do not like this option; it consumes the visible Subject space when they are already sorting lists into their own folders. It's nice for those with really dumb mail clients that can't filter, though, and I use it myself on a couple of lists which I mix into the same folder. Cheers, Stan