On my system running any `mw` command after a fresh install from the AUR, I get:
```
/usr/bin/mw: line 37: [: 1.5: unary operator expected
```
Now the script doesn't error per-se but it does set the `master` and `slave`
variables to wrong values. I'm also not sure how this wasn't raised before;
maybe that's a new bash version thing? I'm on 5.2.37.
Anyway I faffed around trying to fix this, in particular with the `-gt` operator
but it turned out that properly comparing float numbers is a pain in the butt in
bash. I found solutions using `bc` which I thought were weird.
To keep things simple I ended up doing a little substitution on the dot `.`
character and turned these nasty floats into integers, along with using the
`-gt` operator which did the trick on my system. May be unorthodox so feedback
is more than welcome.
Thank you for the great software by the way, lots of gratitude for your work.
Fixes text being interpreted as flags when it starts with a dash.
Try sending yourself a letter with subject starting with '-'.
E.g. if subject is '-10%' fixes error:
> Unknown option -10%
On case-insensitive filesystem,
`inbox` and `Inbox` are the same path.
Running `find Inbox inbox [expr]` will print twice the same information.
Use shell glob instead:
`find` will descend into path `inbox`,
ignoring letter cases, only once.
Fix#828.