Re: Semi-Automatic modification of the subject line

2004-07-09 Thread Zonnet

ON Friday, July 9, 2004, 1:13:59 AM, you wrote:
ZW After highlighting a portion of text and Ctrl+C, you can use Forward button.
ZW The highlighted text will appear in brackets before original subject.
ZW Unfortunately, the original date is lost in forwarding mail and this may be
ZW confusing if you need such information. I don't know how it will work in
ZW more complicated MIME messages, so please test it thoroughly.

Hi Zygmunt,

This works like a charm. Big time saver.
Thanks

-- 
Best regards,
 Gerard 
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Universal Laws of Golf: Topping a 3-iron is the most painful torture known
to man.

Using The Bat! v2.11 on Windows XP 5.1 Build 2600 Service Pack 1




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Re: Semi-Automatic modification of the subject line

2004-07-09 Thread Zonnet

ON Friday, July 9, 2004, 12:44:44 AM, you wrote:
RO Add your other e-mail address to the AB
RO Create a forwarding template for that address
RO Customize it to your liking
RO Add the macro:
RO %Subject=%Clipboard %OFullSubject%-
RO In order to fulfill your wishes.
RO You need to copy your text first to the clipboard to get it in the
RO subject, as a bonus this means that your added text won't have to be
RO in the message.

Hi Roelof,

Thanks. I have currently made the setup with a folder template, much in
the way Zygmuth described. I feel a bid more in control that way.

I will try to get to your address book suggestion after I feel confident I
have all the bits in order.
I should be able to save even more time that way.

Thanks for your help.

-- 
Best regards,
 Gerard 
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
There is no surer or more painful way to learn a rule than to be penalized
once for breaking it. Tom Watson

Using The Bat! v2.11 on Windows XP 5.1 Build 2600 Service Pack 1




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Character sets: An explanation please

2004-07-09 Thread Foster, Graham
Hi Tbtech

There are several parts of TB! that I have never understood properly,
one of them is character sets. I'm in the UK, and ASCII does me fine
on the whole. However I can understand why it is inadequate for other
nationalities.

So - What exactly does TB! DO when a message is in another character
set.. and do I need to care?. I've just noticed that I'm writing in
Latin-9 (I've no idea who set this up - or even if it is right)..
.. is it right? will other recipients in other countries with other
e-mail clients actually get a faithful copy of what I'm rambling
about?

Just interested to fill a hole in my knowledge.
Regards
Graham





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Re: Character sets: An explanation please

2004-07-09 Thread Roelof Otten
Hallo Graham,

On Fri, 9 Jul 2004 13:19:45 +0100GMT (9-7-2004, 14:19 +0200, where I
live), you wrote:

FG So - What exactly does TB! DO when a message is in another character
FG set..

It loads that character set (when it's present on your pc) to show it
properly. When you reply to the message TB is likely to use the same
set, mostly because your reply might contain characters from that set.

FG and do I need to care?.

No.

FG I've just noticed that I'm writing in Latin-9

Your message says:

Content-Type: text/plain;
 charset=us-ascii

Just don't worry about it.

BTW your message didn't contain a signature delimiter:
dashdashspace on an empty line, that makes quoting easier for
most mature e-mail clients (TB being one of them), because your
signature will be excluded from the reply automatically.

And that signature would include this disclaimer:
FG --
FG Notice:  This e-mail message, together with any attachments,
FG contains information of Merck  Co., Inc. (One Merck Drive,

That doesn't make a lot of sense on a public mailing list.

-- 
Groetjes, Roelof

Disclaimer: Any opinion stated in this message is not necessarily shared by my budgies 
or rabbits.




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