Aerc
aerc
https://aerc-mail.org/
An efficient and extensible TUI email client for hackers
aerc is an email client for your terminal written in go. It was originally created by Drew DeVault and is now further developed as a fork by Robin Jarry. It features a tmux-style embedded terminal, an interactive terminal web browser, diff highlighting, an embedded less session, vim-style keybindings, and support for multiple accounts. It optionally supports notmuch.
The client only downloads the information which is necessary to present the UI, making for a snappy and bandwidth-efficient experience. aerc supports IMAP, Maildir, SMTP, and sendmail transfer protocols. Asynchronous IMAP support ensures the UI never gets locked up by a flaky network, as mutt often does.
Documentation
https://man.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc/
- IRC general channel
- irc://irc.libera.chat/aerc
- IRC development channel
- irc://irc.libera.chat/aerc-dev
Licensing
License
Verified by
Verified on
Notes
License
Verified by
Panos Alevropoulos
Verified on
25 March 2022
Leaders and contributors
Resources and communication
Audience | Resource type | URI |
---|---|---|
Users | Mailing List | https://lists.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc-discuss |
Users | Newsgroup | https://lists.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc-announce |
Users | Bug Tracking | https://todo.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc |
Developers | Developer | https://lists.sr.ht/~rjarry/aerc-devel |
Software prerequisites
Kind | Description |
---|---|
Source requirement | scdoc |
Source requirement | go >=1.13 |
Weak prerequisite | notmuch |
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the page “GNU Free Documentation License”.
The copyright and license notices on this page only apply to the text on this page. Any software or copyright-licenses or other similar notices described in this text has its own copyright notice and license, which can usually be found in the distribution or license text itself.