Joseph Gay <[email protected]> writes: > Now comes part 2, he'll want to create folders (as he'll call them) that > will reside locally for archival and organizational purposes. These will > be primarily populated manually by drag and drop or menus. I noticed a > facility for filtering incoming mail into new local folders, but what > about a facility for manually creating new folders (if you'll forgive my > user of the word folder)?
You can create new groups with `G m', which probably has a menu entry somewhere in the group buffer menus. > Now for part 3, importing his existing mail. From what I've read so far, > the nnml backend is the easiest to get working to download pop mail. > However, it may be difficult to transform an EML data file into a > corresponding nnml folder structure, or it may not. I'm not at all > familiar with parsing data from formats that Windows Mail is able to > export. Unless there are any suggestions on an easy way to do this, I > will have to look at the format and see about parsing it. If I could > produce a valid nnml structure, would it be relatively easy to get Gnus > to read it? Yes. If you put stuff into the nnml directory hierarchy and then say `M-x nnml-generate-nov-databases', all the directories should show up as nnml groups. -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) [email protected] * Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen _______________________________________________ info-gnus-english mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english
