on 3/26/2001 3:51 PM, dave marandino at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The message you have 'deleted' from one folder, which are hence displayed
> with the line through them, will not be removed until you choose Edit 'Purge
> deleted items.' Doing so will permanently delete all marked messages from
> the folder.
I presume that changing delete model to "mark msgs as deleted" and "purge
deleted IMAP msgs when leaving IMAP folder" will also permanently delete
them upon changing folders (which isn't what I want, anyway).
Actually, as I use it some more, I see that it's not just deleted msgs.
I have rules to move certain incoming messages to particular folders. One
rule in particular is for Entourage:mac Talk:
If all criteria are met
If any recipient contains "Entourage-Talk"
Then move message to folder "Entourage Talk"
This had two unintended side-effects:
1) deleted messages (delete model set to move msgs to deleted items folder)
would reappear in folder "Entourage Talk"
2) outgoing mail to "Entourage Talk" would be moved from the Sent Items
folder to the "Entourage Talk" folder
Apparently, rules for IMAP accounts act on all msgs, not just incoming msgs?
So, I changed the rule to include a check for the parent folder of the msg,
hoping this would engage the rule only for new incoming msgs:
If all criteria are met
If folder is INBOX (mac.com IMAP account)
If any recipient contains "Entourage-Talk"
Then move message to folder "Entourage Talk"
But, when I drag my original outgoing msg to Entourage Talk back to the Sent
Items folder where it belongs, it will eventually find its way back to the
"Entourage Talk" folder. I don't understand why it moves.
I've changed the delete model back and forth, so, I'm not sure what happens
there anymore. This is an awful lot of work just to keep two computers at
home in sync with each other. I'm sure it'll work great once I get it set
up and understand it better.
Thanks again for any more assistance.
--
john terranova, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ruling elites 'do not justify their power exclusively by de facto
possession of it, but try to find a moral and legal basis for it.'
-- Gaetano Mosca, "The Ruling Class" (1923)
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