I'm not quoting any parts, because your posting was long, and I don't 
want to make the reply twice as long.

First off... the folder and the browser are one in the same entity. They 
are just different ways of viewing the same thing. So if you drag an 
email from an open folder window into the same folder name in the 
browser, you are just dragging the email from its current place TO its 
current place. In other words, you aren't moving it.

Why emailer isn't showing the emails in the browser but is showing it in 
the open folder window, I can't say... but I DO know that seems to be an 
issue when your mail index is screwed up.

So the FIRST thing I would do, before you do ANYTHING else... backup your 
mail folder (mail database and mail index files). The Mail folder is in 
the Emailer Files folder (usually in the Emailer Application folder). 
Don't just copy these to somewhere else on your hard drive. Move them to 
a removable disk (and eject the disk) or compress them, or do something 
that makes the backup copy inaccessable by the system.

Then, do a typical rebuild (start Emailer holding OPTION, choose Typical 
Rebuild). If that doesn't solve the problem, go into the Mail folder, 
throw out the files in there, and restore them from your backup. Then try 
again doing an Advanced Rebuild. I know you said you tried this already, 
but try it again.

If that STILL doesn't solve the problem, once again, throw out the files 
in the Mail Folder and restore from your backup. This time remove the 
Mail Index file from the folder and restart Emailer. This forces a total 
replacement rebuild of the index file. Be aware that from the sounds of 
things, your Index is pretty screwed up, which means the Advanced Rebuild 
and/or removing the Index file may cause a large chunk of your email to 
wind up in odd places (usually either back in the Inbox, or in the 
Deleted Mail folder). This is just something you will have to deal with, 
and will have to manually refile everything after the rebuild is done. 
This result does NOT mean the problem isn't fixed, actually, it usually 
means just the opposite, that the problem IS fixed, and because of the 
problems Emailer now no longer knows where to store the email.


If this STILL doesn't fix the problem... try creating a new folder, and 
drag the emails from a bad folder into the new folder. Then delete the 
bad folder. Then do a Typical Rebuild (remember to restore your Mail 
database and Index from backup BEFORE doing this stuff, that way you are 
always working on the original bad copy and not some hybrid half fixed, 
but probably even more screwed up copy).


And finally, if that STILL doesn't fix the problem, you may just have a 
database that is so screwed up you can't fix it. That's when it is time 
to look into one of the 3rd party archive tools and offload as much email 
as you can salvage, and then trash the Mail Database and Index and start 
from scratch (trashing the Mail Database will also result in the loss of 
your Account settings, so make sure you know what your accounts are 
before you proceed... of course you will have your backup copy in the 
event that you need to reload to write stuff down).


As for this being a bug... maybe. It does seem that some people suffer 
from Database problems often, while others never do. That tends to be a 
sign of a bug. One group of people are doing something that causes the 
problem, while the other group never uses whatever feature has the bug. 
Getting it fixed... nope, not gonna happen. No one is left to fix it. 
Emailer is what Emailer is, and it isn't going to change any time soon.

-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>

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