Hi Chuck,
>>> String -- \nTo:, Location -- Kludges, Presence -- No.
> I tryed this one and it works and doesnt work. It works in that the
> one SPAM message I had in my inbox that doesnt have a TO field was
> filtered and moved to Trash. But the remaining 10 messages that had in
> the inbox that had a TO field were filtered to Trash to.
Hmmm, it works here. I've just tried it a couple of times. Have you
tried the other one ("^To:", without the quotation mark)? In regular
express, "^" means "start of line", while "\n" means linefeed
character (LF). For your purpose, both should work (except where
"To:" is at the top of the message header, where "\n" won't work for
there's no LF before it, which is unlikely since I have never seen
such cases).
If "^To:" works and "\nTo:" doesn't, then the message doesn't end a
line with LF (in fact CRLF in DOS/Windows). I'm not sure it's
possible. Machintosh system (and maybe some others that I don't
know) end a line in text files with CR only, but I think TB convert
them on the fly. (It does when importing such a message.)
If neither "^To:" nor "\nTo:" works, there are some other things to
check: did you put quotation mark around (part of) the string, or is
there any trailing spaces?
That's all I can think of now. Maybe some other people have better
ideas.
--
Best regards,
Ming-Li
Using The Bat! 1.45 S/MIME under Win2k
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