On Thu, Jul 29, 200411:24 AM, the following words from Dr Dave drdave-
[EMAIL PROTECTED], emerged from a plethora of SPAM ...
>How do you view the message source?
You can use the following AppleScript to view the Source of your messages:
<Begin AppleScript>
property deleteReminder : "Viewing Message Source: "
property reminderEnd : " - Delete Me!!"
to showSource from the dataGiven
set the deleteReminder to the deleteReminder & (item 1 of the
dataGiven & the reminderEnd)
tell application "PowerMail"
set the tempMsg to make new message with properties {subject:the
deleteReminder, content:item 2 of the dataGiven}
open the tempMsg
end tell
end showSource
tell application "PowerMail"
set the msgList to the current messages
repeat with varMsg in the msgList
set the msgSub to varMsg's subject
set the msgSource to the varMsg's source
showSource of me from {the msgSub, the msgSource}
end repeat
end tell
<End AppleScript>
There are other AppleScripts to send the source to another application.
They have been posted to the list previously, so just holler if you want
another variation. There are some AppleScripts at CTM's site (although I
don't recall if there are scripts to view the source):
<http://www.ctmdev.com/tools/>
Also, I have some AppleScripts on my .Mac page (For viewing the source of
messages, see the scripts at the bottom of the following URL.):
<http://homepage.mac.com/cheshirekat/AppleScripts.html>
The script above is newer than the one on my .Mac web page for viewing
the Source in PowerMail. I haven't had a chance to update it because I
have many more scripts to add and am looking into different ways to
organizing them all before the web page gets too unwieldy. I'm thinking
about organizing my web page in a similar fashion to how I organize my
Scripts folder - then I can find and update stuff more easily.
cheshirekat
--
Life is everywhere. The earth is throbbing with it, it's like music. The
plants, the creatures, the ones we see, the ones we don't see, it's like
one, big, pulsating symphony.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider , Northern Exposure, Mite Makes
Right, 1994
* 867 PowerBook G4 * OS X 10.2.8 * 768 MB Ram *
* Addictions: iTunes * AppleScript * Mike's Cards * FileMaker Pro *