On 24 Feb 2021, at 15:07, Lisa Sieverts wrote:
Hi Todd,
Whenever I’ve had trouble, it’s been a misplaced semi-colon or
parenthesis or something like that. Stare at your code until you can
see what’s different about the code you wrote compared to what was
already there.
Or paste it and
Hi Todd,
Whenever I’ve had trouble, it’s been a misplaced semi-colon or
parenthesis or something like that. Stare at your code until you can see
what’s different about the code you wrote compared to what was already
there.
Or paste it and send it to the list and we can help find the
On 24 Feb 2021, at 19:52, Todd Singletary wrote:
> I have a smart folder that contains all unread messages. It is titled
> “Unread.” I have tried to create a keybinding to access it like the other
> gmail custom key bindings (e.g. g + u, for unread). The syntax is the same in
> the .plist
On 24 Feb 2021, at 19:39, Raza Rizvi wrote:
…
Copy the files back to the “Users/xxx/Library/Application
Support/MailMate folder, recreate the original alias, no problems
and MailMate starts up.
I believe that you need to make that change within MailMate rather
than try to construct the
…
Copy the files back to the “Users/xxx/Library/Application
Support/MailMate folder, recreate the original alias, no problems and
MailMate starts up.
I believe that you need to make that change within MailMate rather
than try to construct the linkage yourself. See
I apologize if this isn’t very helpful but, IIRC, both HFS+ and APFS
have some support for directory-level compression.
There appears to be an [answer on Ask
Different](https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/360120/apfs-how-do-i-enable-transparent-compression)
which addresses this: namely
I have a smart folder that contains all unread messages. It is titled
“Unread.” I have tried to create a keybinding to access it like the
other gmail custom key bindings (e.g. g + u, for unread). The syntax is
the same in the .plist file, but it is not working. I’m sure I’m
missing something
On 24 Feb 2021, at 11:05, Raza Rizvi wrote:
Hi,
One of the nice things about MailMate is the great search options and
instant response, but that comes at the price of having a local copy
of your email, and no doubt many of you have multiple mailboxes, as I
do.
So on my 250GB SSD root
Hi,
One of the nice things about MailMate is the great search options and
instant response, but that comes at the price of having a local copy of
your email, and no doubt many of you have multiple mailboxes, as I do.
So on my 250GB SSD root volume I have just about 50GB now used by
MailMate