On 19:27 CST, Tue, Feb 3, 2004, Marlyse Comte wrote:

>you could just add 2 lines to your filter in PM:
>
>first filter is the one from SpamSieve which puts it into it's own spam
>folder (execute apple script). 
>
>then the next one is 'move message to trash'" and then the next one "move
>message to folder spam".
>
>this will have the message not show up in the recent window but remain
>bold in the spam folder.
>
>I just tested it here and this works here.

Well, that was embarrassingly easy. Thanks. 

Evan

>--------------- former message(s) quotes: ----------------
>
>>On 10:14 CST, Thu, May 1, 2003, Michael Tsai wrote:
>>
>>>On Wednesday, April 30, 2003, at 10:43  AM, Bob Parks wrote:
>>>
>>>> I know I can set up the script to file the spam in the "Mail Trash", 
>>>> and
>>>> then it does not show up in recent mail, but that clutters my trash
>>>> folder (which I occasionally have to pull messages out of), with  spam
>>>> that I dont want.
>>>
>>>Per Rick's suggestion to move the message twice, please try changing:
>>>
>>>     move m to message container spamFolderName
>>>
>>>in the script to:
>>>
>>>     move m to message container "Mail Trash"
>>>     move m to message container spamFolderName
>>
>>Has anyone gotten this to work - I've been trying to keep SpamSieve-
>>tagged spam from showing up in the Recent Mail browser, and supposedly
>>making this change to SpamSieve's "Move Mail" script will move it to the
>>trash, thus taking it out of the Recent browser, then move it to the Spam
>>folder (I do want things to go into the Spam folder - every couple of
>>weeks I go through it to see if anything inadvertently got tagged as spam
>>before deleting all spam). But properly properly identified and labelled
>>spam is still showing up in the Recent browser. 
>>
>>I've checked w/ Michael Tsai, SpamSieve's author, and he's stumped. Has
>>anyone come up with an alternate way of doing this? 

-- 
Scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Symantec's AntiVirus
Research Center today confirmed that foot-and-mouth disease cannot be
spread by Microsoft's Outlook email application, believed to be the first
 time the program has ever failed to propagate a major virus.  


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