Yes
Is the focus on the account tree pane when you try Ctrl Alt Shift L?
Current version is 4.2.23 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Hallo Petr,
On Wed, 01 Sep 2010 12:56:02 +0200GMT (1-9-2010, 12:56 , where I
live), you wrote:
PL ctrl+shift+alt+L solution does not help (Number of finded losts
PL folders are: 0)
PL Any ideas??
Is the focus on the account tree pane when you try Ctrl Alt Shift L?
--
Groetjes, Roelof
In God
The folder tree on HDD under %APPDATA%\The Bat! is OK, but there are
few missed folders in TB folder list. There are also unnamed folder,
which receive new mails, which normally should be filtered into missed
folders.
ctrl+shift+alt+L solution does not help (Number of finded losts
folders are: 0
Hello Chris,
On Thu, 1 Jan 2004 19:53:04 -0600 GMT (02/01/2004, 08:53 +0700 GMT),
Chris Montgomery wrote:
Issue #1:
For some odd reason, I invoked the CTRL-SHFT-ALT-L keys to see
if any folders were missing. 60 new folders *were* found. I discovered
soon thereafter that all of my account
Howdy Thomas,
Thursday, January 1, 2004, 9:37:17 PM, Thomas Fernandez wrote:
$KNOWN$ is the internal name for Inbox-Known. Delete both the $KNOWN$
folder and the Inbox-Known, and create a new folder which you call
$KNOWN$. It will be displayed as Inbox-Known. At least in theory.
I'm not
Hello Roelof Otten,
on Mon, 29 Dec 2003 06:29:43 +0100 (2003-12-29 06:29:43 in .nl) in the
message with reference mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED] you
[RO] wrote (at least in part):
PO Shift+Ctrl+Alt+l (or L): search for unlisted folders, why should one
PO have to use this?
RO Only when you've somehow
Hello Peter,
PO Shift+Ctrl+Alt+l (or L): search for unlisted folders, why should
PO one have to use this?
RO Only when you've somehow lost folders from your configuration,
RO while they're still on disk.
The what for I know. The question was: why should one have to use
this?
Typically you
Hello TBTECH,
Shift+Ctrl+Alt+l (or L): search for unlisted folders, why should one
have to use this?
--
Kind regards,
Peter Ouwehand
E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- - -
Created the above using
A program which insists to be : The Bat! V2.03 Beta/24
An OS which insists to be : Windows 2000 5.0 Build
Hallo Peter,
On Mon, 29 Dec 2003 03:33:49 +0100GMT (29-12-03, 3:33 +0100, where I
live), you wrote:
PO Shift+Ctrl+Alt+l (or L): search for unlisted folders, why should one
PO have to use this?
Only when you've somehow lost folders from your configuration, while
they're still on disk
Hello Steve,
Tuesday, October 14, 2003, 8:25:19 PM, you wrote:
SM In TB! V2 the Message Finder Dialog Box has a Tree-List of Folders
SM with the title Look in folder(s). The 'L' is underlined which
SM indicates I should be able to use the Alt-L keys to move focus to the
SM folder tree-list.
I
In TB! V2 the Message Finder Dialog Box has a Tree-List of Folders
with the title Look in folder(s). The 'L' is underlined which
indicates I should be able to use the Alt-L keys to move focus to the
folder tree-list.
This doesn't work on my PC, an IBM Thinkpad T21 running W2K. I just
get a 'beep
Hello Steve,
On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 08:55:19 +1000 GMT (15/10/2003, 05:55 +0700 GMT),
Steve Mullarkey wrote:
In TB! V2 the Message Finder Dialog Box has a Tree-List of Folders
with the title Look in folder(s). The 'L' is underlined which
indicates I should be able to use the Alt-L keys to move
Wednesday, January 8, 2003, 6:18:57 AM,Dave wrote:
DC Note that MA. is an abbreviation for Master of Arts.
Either MA or M.A. are the correct abbreviations for Master of Arts -
you should use full stops for both letters or neither.
(Er isn't this getting a little OT now? Looking sideways
Hello Anne,
and Dave,
and Gavin,
On Wednesday, January 08, 2003, 8:45 AM, you wrote:
A Wednesday, January 8, 2003, 6:18:57 AM,Dave wrote:
DC Note that MA. is an abbreviation for Master of Arts.
A Either MA or M.A. are the correct abbreviations for Master of Arts -
A you should use full stops
On Thursday, January 9, 2003, 2:13:30 AM, Mary wrote:
A (Er isn't this getting a little OT now? Looking sideways in case
A of flying fish.)
Gavin, we might as well give up! We are outnumbered. And this entire
discussion really ought to move to TBOT (The Bat Off-Topic list). Are
you
Hi folks,
I noticed something funny. As you can see from this post, I use the
old-fashioned convention of sticking two spaces at the start of a
sentence. However, if I were to reformat this paragraph with ALT-L,
those spaces would be reduced to one each.
Why is this so? Must I surrender my
this paragraph with ALT-L,
GS those spaces would be reduced to one each.
GS Why is this so?
You'd need to ask the authors that.
GS Must I surrender my beloved sentence layout?
Only if you'd like to reformat blocks using Alt-L, Alt-R or Alt-J
--
Groetjes, Roelof
Hello Roelof,
and Gavin,
On Tuesday, January 07, 2003, 3:20 AM, you wrote:
R Hallo Gavin,
GS ... As you can see from this post, I use the
GS old-fashioned convention of sticking two spaces at the start of a
GS sentence. However, if I were to reformat this paragraph with ALT-L,
GS those spaces
Hi,
Gavin Sinclair wrote in msgid:[EMAIL PROTECTED] :
Why is this so? Must I surrender my beloved sentence layout?
The habit of putting two spaces after every sentence dates back to the
era of the typewriter. Whether one should stick to it is debatable.
(Sources:
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, 9:56:30 AM, Mary Bull wrote:
MB I think that this one space between the full stop (period) and the
MB capital (upper case) letter of the following sentence is a
MB convention agreed upon in most word processors and probably the
MB authors of TB! are just following the
should this algorithm
distinguish between abbreviations and sentence ending periods (full
stops)?
I find it surprising that the ALT-L command modifies spaces. I expect
it to only modify newlines, leaving no problem of taking anything into
account.
Regards,
Markus
Thanks again,
Gavin
Gavin,
On 07-01-2003 13:40, you [G] wrote in
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
G I find it surprising that the ALT-L command modifies spaces.
Sometimes people don't use the proper spaces (e.g. use 2 after full stop
:) so ALT+L should fix this!
--
greeting Best regards /greeting
On Wednesday, January 8, 2003, 12:10:44 AM, Peter wrote:
Gavin,
On 07-01-2003 13:40, you [G] wrote in
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
G I find it surprising that the ALT-L command modifies spaces.
Sometimes people don't use the proper spaces (e.g. use 2 after full stop
:
Gavin,
On 07-01-2003 14:25, you [G] wrote in
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
G (Left|Right|Center|Full)-justification has little to do with spaces
G and everything to do with newlines.
Apparently not. :)
(I like it that way, BTW)
--
greeting Best regards /greeting
author Peter
On Wednesday, January 8, 2003, 12:25:25 AM, Gavin wrote:
(Left|Right|Center|Full)-justification has little to do with spaces
and everything to do with newlines.
Silly me, of course full justification has a lot to do with spaces,
but discrepancies would be easily fixed IMO.
Gavin
Hi Gavin,
On Wed, 8 Jan 2003 00:25:25 +1100
Gavin Sinclair [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(Left|Right|Center|Full)-justification has little to do with spaces
and everything to do with newlines.
No, of course this is wrong.
See this line
and this
and this line too
No imagine Alt+L would be applied
Hi,
Peter Palmreuther wrote in msgid:[EMAIL PROTECTED] :
All in all I don't see the down side of The Bat! stripping the double
spaces to single ones. This is still e-mail and not a typewriting
competition and it seems we're all able to read texts even if sentences
are isolated by single
Markus,
On 07-01-2003 16:45, you [M] wrote in
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
M (BTW I encountered the double-space-after-periods discussion only in
M English speaking groups. It has never occurred in German discussion
M groups. Apparently it originated only in English typography
Hi Markus,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 16:45:52 +0100
Markus Gloede [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
All in all I don't see the down side of The Bat! stripping the
double spaces to single ones. This is still e-mail and not a
typewriting competition and it seems we're all able to read texts
even if sentences
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003 @ 7:45:52 AM [-0700], Markus Gloede wrote:
(BTW I encountered the double-space-after-periods discussion only in
English speaking groups. It has never occurred in German discussion
groups. Apparently it originated only in English typography style
guides.)
Wait a
Markus,
Tuesday, January 7, 2003, 1:57:36 AM, you wrote:
Markus it is just harder
Markus (impossible?) to come up with an algorithm that takes two spaces at
Markus the end of sentences into account. How should this algorithm
Markus distinguish between abbreviations and sentence ending periods
Tuesday, 1/7/2003, 8:53 AM
Hi Matt,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003, at 08:19:48 [GMT -0800] (which was 8:19 AM where I live)
you wrote about: 'ALT-L strips spaces?'
MT Wait a minute, am I the only one who types their e-mails on an actual
MT typewriter, scan them in, cut and paste to an e-mail, and send
Hallo Markus,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 16:45:52 +0100GMT (7-1-03, 16:45 +0100GMT, where I
live), you wrote:
MG (BTW I encountered the double-space-after-periods discussion only in
MG English speaking groups. It has never occurred in German discussion
MG groups. Apparently it originated only in
Hello Peter,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 15:42:02 +0100 GMT (07/01/03, 21:42 +0700 GMT),
Peter Palmreuther wrote:
What's next? Simple: The Bat! has to wrap each line at XX (e.g. 72)
characters. But it shouldn't wrap in the middle of a word, but only
between them AND not after XX characters.
So The
Hello Markus,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 10:57:36 +0100 GMT (07/01/03, 16:57 +0700 GMT),
Markus Gloede wrote:
(Sources:
http://www.raycomm.com/techwhirl/archives/9602/techwhirl-9602-00470.html
I personally love this quote:
Your typing as well as yyour typesetting will benefit from
unlearning this
Hi Thomas,
On Wed, 8 Jan 2003 00:17:44 +0700
Thomas Fernandez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What's next? Simple: The Bat! has to wrap each line at XX (e.g. 72)
characters. But it shouldn't wrap in the middle of a word, but only
between them AND not after XX characters.
So The Bat! has to spplit
Hello Peter,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 19:32:45 +0100 GMT (08/01/03, 01:32 +0700 GMT),
Peter Palmreuther wrote:
So it's up to those who are familar with Chinese to make statements
about how the editor can distinguish when a word or a package of
symbols that build a entity of sense is over for
I personally love this quote:
Your typing as well as yyour typesetting will benefit from
unlearning this quaint Victorian habit. As a general rule, no more
than a single space is required after a period, colon, or any other
mark of punctuation.
I honestly didn't know they had typewriters
Hi Dave,
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003 at 08:24:38 [GMT -0800], you wrote:
DC My own preference is NOT to compress space. People vary in how they
DC do spacing -- espcially end-of-sentence spacing. Users do,
DC sometimes, accidentally add spaces they do not want, but it is a
DC rather uncommon
Hello Lars,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 20:28:50 +0100 GMT (08/01/03, 02:28 +0700 GMT),
Lars Geiger wrote:
The problem is that a programme can't distinguish between the different
kinds of periods used in texts.
Why not? All you need is a list of abbreviations that are followed by
a period.
--
Hello marek,
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 19:50:01 +0100 GMT (08/01/03, 01:50 +0700 GMT),
marek jedlinski wrote:
According to this site, the invention dates back to 1700:
Ah, thanks for this page.
http://www.ladytypewriter.co.uk/typewriter-timeline.htm
By late 19th century the typewriter was pretty
Lars,
Tuesday, January 7, 2003, 11:28:50 AM, you wrote:
DC So, the change to the algorithm would simply be to preserve all
DC spacing.
...
Lars The problem is that a programme can't distinguish between the different
Lars kinds of periods used in texts. That is why any algorithm can only
Lars
On Wednesday, January 8, 2003, 5:18:57 PM, Dave wrote:
An excellent performer would be Yo Yo Ma.
Note that MA. is an abbreviation for Master of Arts. And lest you note the
case difference on the A, what if there were a spelling error? Making
semantic choices based on capitalization
In [EMAIL PROTECTED]">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED],
Gavin Sinclair [GS] wrote:'
GS I noticed something funny. As you can see from this post, I use the
GS old-fashioned convention of sticking two spaces at the start of a
GS sentence. However, if I were to reformat this paragraph with ALT-L,
Hello jonathan,
An archeological dig discovered that on Friday, January 4, 2002 at
09:06 GMT -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [JW] typed the
following:
JW An on-going and annoying problem with reformatting paragraphs with Alt-L.
JW Sometimes I'll have to position the cursor multiple times within a
JW
An on-going and annoying problem with reformatting paragraphs with Alt-L.
Sometimes I'll have to position the cursor multiple times within a paragaph
and
use Alt-L to reformat it properly. The first time may leave a paragraph
looking
like:
Some text here some text here Some text here some text
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Hi jonathan,
On 04 January 2002 at 09:06:55 [GMT-0500] (which was 14:06 where I
live) [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
and made these points:
jwpc The second Alt-L usually works, but sometimes doesn't unless I
jwpc place it at the end
Friday, January 04, 2002, 2:15:13 PM, Marck D Pearlstone wrote:
This is a known problem with Alt-L, especially when positioning the
cursor with the mouse instead of cursor keys.
---
... and I thought that it was only me! Is this issue fixed in the next
release?
Cheers,
--
Geoff Lane
@ 08:13:30 -0600 [ Fri, 4 Jan 2002], Sam [S] wrote these words of
wisdom:
...
S Try placing your cursor within the paragraph you want to format and
S then move it (the cursor) several spaces left or right with the
S right or left arrow buttons and then hit Alt + L. Works for me the
S first time
Hello,
I'm getting nuts about this.
I know this is discussed earlier, but my question is a little but
different.
When replying to a message the quoted text is not wrapped. This
means that I must go to the paragraph and click ALT+L. I use
auto-format, auto-wrap, but not justify
Hello jsvrp.gw,
On Mon, 4 Jun 2001 16:36:29 +0200 GMT (04/06/2001, 22:36 +0800 GMT),
jsvrp.gw wrote:
jg When I reply I want The Bat! automatically wrap and left align the
jg quoted text. This must be possible and should be normal behaviour?
jg It almost like a bug.
jg Does someone have
Hi jsvrp.gw,
On Mon, 4 Jun 2001, at 16:36:29 +0200 you wrote:
jg When replying to a message the quoted text is not wrapped.
jg This means that I must go to the paragraph and click ALT+L. I
jg use auto-format, auto-wrap, but not justify on autowrap.
jg When I reply I want The Bat! automatically
On Monday June 4, 2001 at 8:00:16 AM, Lars Geiger wrote:
jg When I reply I want The Bat! automatically wrap and left align the
jg quoted text. This must be possible and should be normal behaviour? It
jg almost like a bug.
No, it's not a bug. It's a design decision. As you said it
yourself,
On Monday, June 04, 2001, 11:08:50 AM, Nick Andriash wrote:
jg When I reply I want The Bat! automatically wrap and left align
jg the quoted text. This must be possible and should be normal
jg behaviour? It almost like a bug.
No, it's not a bug. It's a design decision. As you said it
yourself,
Hello Listers,
On Mon, 4 Jun 2001, at 09:08:50 [GMT -0700] (which was 18:08 where I
live) Nick wrote:
NA Unfortunately, the %Wrapped=%Quotes Macro combination only works
NA on the first paragraph. I agree with the originator that TB!
NA should alter the behaviour and reformat all
On Monday June 4, 2001 at 10:10:26 AM, Chema Berian wrote:
What about adding a new Macro, ie. %WrapAll=%Quotes ??
Whatever it would take. ;o)
--
Nick
-=N.J. Andriash | Vancouver, B.C. Canada=-
SecureBat! v1.53/iKey1000 | Win 98 SE | GnuPG v1.0.6
No, I think I would classify that as a bad design decision, because
properly wrapped quoted text does not change the interpretation of that
text... only the appearance.
Could not agree more!
Unfortunately, the %Wrapped=%Quotes Macro combination only works on the
first paragraph. I agree with
Hello Chema,
On Mon, 4 Jun 2001 19:10:26 +0200 GMT (05/06/2001, 01:10 +0800 GMT),
Chema Berian wrote:
NA Unfortunately, the %Wrapped=%Quotes Macro combination only works
NA on the first paragraph. I agree with the originator that TB!
NA should alter the behaviour and reformat all quoted
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On Mon, 4 Jun 2001 13:35:10 -0400, Miles graced us with these comments:
MJ Yes. This feature is really annoying and is probably affecting the
MJ vast majority of TB users, EXCEPT the gentle computer code meisters on
MJ this list who evidently do
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On Tue, 5 Jun 2001 02:08:51 +0800, Thomas thoughtfully wrote the
following:
CB What about adding a new Macro, ie. %WrapAll=%Quotes ??
T I think the %Wrapped macro should wrap all. What is the purpose of
T wrapping only the first paragraph? I think
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Monday, June 04, 2001, 7:08:50 PM, Nick Andriash wrote:
Unfortunately, the %Wrapped=%Quotes Macro combination only
works on the first paragraph. I agree with the originator that
TB! should alter the behaviour and reformat all quoted
paragraphs
Hi Silviu,
On Mon, 4 Jun 2001, at 19:35:53 +0300 you wrote:
SC Or at least a switch for those who like to do that manually
SC (if there's such a person :) )
Oh yes, there is. Usually I go through the quotes, cut out
unnecessary things and reformat the paragraphs before I put in my
reply. And
Hello all,
I've been following the recent chat about the editor of TheBat
with great interest. Personally I love it. All the features that
some people dislike actually appeal to me! I especially love the
Alt L option, and seeing it 'clean up' untidy quotes is a real
Hallo candlet,
On Sun, 17 Sep 2000 11:45:47 +0100 GMT (17/09/2000, 18:45 +0800 GMT),
candlet wrote:
c Why O why doesn't Alt L work when one positions
c the cursor with the mouse??
Now that's a bug. It's known.
--
Cheers,
Thomas mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED
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Hello candlet !
On Sun, 17 Sep 2000 11:45:47 +0100 GMT your local time,
which was 17.09.2000, 12:45 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote:
snip
c Why O why doesn't Alt L work when one positions
c the cursor with the mouse??
snip
I did not even
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