handling.xml 11 KB

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  1. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  2. <section id="ch_handling">
  3. <title>Basic mail handling</title>
  4. <section id="handling_folders">
  5. <title>Mail folders</title>
  6. <para>
  7. If you receive a lot of emails, you will probably soon find that your
  8. Inbox folder is growing to the point where you have a hard time finding
  9. an email again, even if you received it just a few days ago. This is why
  10. Claws Mail, like most good mail clients, provides you with multiple
  11. possibilities in organising your mails.
  12. </para>
  13. <para>
  14. You can create as many folders and subfolders as you need. For example,
  15. one folder for your family, one folder for friends, folders for
  16. mailing-lists, archive folders for old mails that you still want to have
  17. available, etc. To create a new folder, simply right-click on its parent
  18. folder and choose <quote>New folder...</quote> from the drop-down menu.
  19. If you want to create a folder <quote>Friends</quote> inside your Inbox
  20. folder, for example, just right-click on the Inbox folder, choose
  21. <quote>New folder...</quote>, and type in <quote>Friends</quote> in the
  22. dialogue that appears. Click the OK button, and the new folder is
  23. created.
  24. </para>
  25. </section>
  26. <section id="handling_organisation">
  27. <title>Folder organisation</title>
  28. <para>
  29. Now that you have created folders, you can manipulate them and their
  30. contents using menu items or drag 'n' drop. Moving one folder into
  31. another, for example, can be done by right-clicking on the folder you
  32. want to move, choosing the <quote>Move folder...</quote> menu item, and
  33. selecting the destination folder. This will move the folder, with the
  34. mail it contains, to a subfolder of the chosen folder. Alternatively,
  35. you can drag a folder to another one by clicking on it, keeping the
  36. mouse pressed, moving the mouse cursor over the destination folder and
  37. releasing the button.
  38. </para>
  39. <para>
  40. If you want to remove a folder and the mail it contains, simply
  41. right-click on the folder and choose <quote>Delete folder...</quote>. As
  42. this is potentially harmful, (the mails in the folder will be deleted
  43. and not recoverable), you will be asked for confirmation.
  44. </para>
  45. <para>
  46. In the same manner that you move a folder to another one, you can move
  47. emails from one folder to another. The same method applies for this:
  48. either drag 'n' drop emails to a folder, or choose
  49. <quote>Move...</quote> after right-clicking on the mail. You can select
  50. multiple emails by using the Control or Shift key while clicking on
  51. them. You can also copy emails to another folder by pressing the Control
  52. key when drag'n'dropping, or by choosing <quote>Copy...</quote> from the
  53. email's contextual menu.
  54. </para>
  55. </section>
  56. <section id="imap_subscriptions">
  57. <title>IMAP subscriptions</title>
  58. <para>
  59. The IMAP protocol allows one to store a list of subscribed folders. Most
  60. mail user agents hide the unsubscribed folders away from the GUI, and have
  61. a little window allowing to subscribe to these unsubscribed folders. In
  62. Claws Mail, subscriptions are respected by default, and only subscribed
  63. folders will be displayed. If you want to see all your folders, you can just
  64. uncheck <quote>Show subscribed folders only</quote> in the IMAP mailbox'
  65. contextual menu or the account preferences. You'll be able to subscribe and
  66. unsubscribe folders from this contextual menu too. If the unsubscribed
  67. folders are hidden from the list, you will have two ways to subscribe to
  68. a folder: either show all folders, subscribe the ones you want, and hide
  69. unsubscribed folders again; or, if you know the folder's name, use
  70. <quote>Create new folder</quote> in its parent's contextual menu.
  71. </para>
  72. </section>
  73. <section id="handling_filters">
  74. <title>Filtering</title>
  75. <para>
  76. Once you have a nice folder hierarchy in place, you'll probably want
  77. Claws Mail to sort your incoming emails automatically, in order to
  78. avoid having to move messages manually each time they arrive. For this
  79. you can use the Filtering feature.
  80. </para>
  81. <para>
  82. You will find the filtering preferences via the
  83. <quote>Configuration</quote> menu, <quote>Filtering</quote> item. From
  84. this dialogue you will be able to define new rules, modify or delete
  85. existing rules, re-order the rules, and enable/disable them. Filtering
  86. rules are defined by five things: the enabled status, a name, an account
  87. name, a condition, and an action. All disabled rules are simply ignored.
  88. The <quote>Name</quote> entry is optional, it's there to help you
  89. identify your rules. An account name can be chosen, which will restrict
  90. the rule to mail retrieved from the named account only, skipping it for
  91. mail retrieved from all other accounts. The default value is
  92. <quote>All</quote>, which means that the rule is global and will
  93. be applied to all mail, regardless of the account from which it was
  94. retrieved, (see paragraph below). The condition format is an expression
  95. defining what Claws Mail should look for when filtering mail, for
  96. example: <quote>to matchcase claws-mail-users</quote> is for messages
  97. sent to any address containing <quote>claws-mail-users</quote>. You can
  98. easily define conditions by clicking the <quote>Define...</quote> button
  99. at the right of the field. The last part of a filtering rule is the
  100. action, which instructs Claws Mail what to do with mail matching
  101. the condition we just defined. For example, <quote>mark_as_read</quote>
  102. marks the mail as read as soon as it arrives in your inbox, or
  103. <quote>move #mh/Mailbox/inbox/Friends</quote> moves the mail to your
  104. <quote>Friends</quote> subfolder. Here, too, a <quote>Define...</quote>
  105. button is available to help you define the action to take.
  106. </para>
  107. <para>
  108. Filtering rules can be assigned to a single, specific account. To do
  109. this select an account from the <quote>Account</quote> combo below the
  110. <quote>Name</quote> entry. When you set a specific account the filtering
  111. rule will only be applied to messages retrieved from the named account.
  112. The default value is <quote>All</quote>, which means that the rule will
  113. be applied globally, to messages retrieved from any account. When filtering
  114. messages manually, if there are any per-account filtering rules defined,
  115. you will be asked what you wish to do with those rules. Possible choices
  116. are to skip the rules, or apply these rules regardless of the account to
  117. which they belong, or use the rules for the currently selected account.
  118. Caution: if you unset the <quote>Show this message next time</quote>
  119. checkbox and click <quote>Filter</quote>, on subsequent manual filtering
  120. this choice will be applied without any confirmation. Account specific
  121. rules are only available for filtering, (at incorporation or manually),
  122. the feature is not available for folder Processing or Pre/Post-Processing.
  123. </para>
  124. <para>
  125. Once you have defined the rule, you can add it to the list of rules with
  126. the <quote>Add</quote> button. Don't forget that the order of the rules
  127. is important: if Claws Mail finds a rule suitable for an email that
  128. either moves or deletes the email, it will stop looking for further
  129. rules for that email. This is why, at the right of the rules list, you
  130. will find four buttons allowing the re-ordering of rules. The rules can
  131. also be reordered by drag 'n' drop.
  132. </para>
  133. <para>
  134. There is also a quick method of creating filtering rules based on the
  135. selected message. After selecting a mail of the type you want to filter,
  136. choose <quote>Create filter rule...</quote> from the
  137. <quote>Tools</quote> menu, and choose a type from the submenu:
  138. <quote>Automatically</quote> mainly helps for mailing-lists posts,
  139. <quote>by From</quote> creates a filter based on the sender of the
  140. email, <quote>by To</quote> creates a filter based on the recipient, and
  141. <quote>by Subject</quote> creates a filter based on the subject. Each
  142. one of these types of filtering has its advantages, it's up to you to
  143. find out what would be the more practical. Usually,
  144. <quote>by From</quote> is nice to sort out your regular contacts' mails,
  145. whereas <quote>by To</quote> is more useful to sort mails sent to your
  146. different accounts.
  147. </para>
  148. </section>
  149. <section id="handling_searching">
  150. <title>Searching</title>
  151. <para>
  152. There are several methods for searching your emails.
  153. </para>
  154. <para>
  155. One of them is relatively standard, and can be found in the
  156. <quote>Edit</quote> menu, it's the <quote>Search folder...</quote> item.
  157. This will open a window where you can specify one or more fields to
  158. search in: From, To, Subject, and Body. After having specified your
  159. criteria, click on the <quote>Back</quote> or <quote>Forward</quote>
  160. buttons to navigate through the matching emails, or use
  161. <quote>Find all</quote> to select all the matching emails at once. Be
  162. aware that searching for text in the body of emails is much slower than
  163. searching in its headers, because the body of emails isn't cached by
  164. Claws Mail. <quote>Extended Search</quote> mode can be turned on by
  165. clicking the relevant checkbox, thus allowing you to use match expressions
  166. like those used in <quote>Filtering</quote> rules.
  167. </para>
  168. <para>
  169. If you're looking at a large email and want to find a particular part
  170. of it, you can use the <quote>Find in current message...</quote> item of
  171. the <quote>Edit</quote> menu. This works like search in a text document.
  172. </para>
  173. <para>
  174. The final way of searching for emails is using <quote>Quick Search</quote>,
  175. which you can display or hide by cilicking the little magnifying glass icon
  176. under the Message List. It is also accessible from the <quote>Quick Search</quote>
  177. item of the <quote>Edit</quote> menu. <quote>Quick Search</quote> is more
  178. powerful than the normal search as it can search in standard headers (From,
  179. To, Subject) or in <quote>Extended</quote> mode using just about any
  180. criteria you can think of. When in <quote>Extended</quote> mode, the
  181. <quote>Information</quote> button is visible, enabling you to see the
  182. search syntax. An <quote>Edit</quote> button is also available which
  183. allows you to quickly create a rule. You can also configure
  184. <quote>Quick Search</quote> to search recursively through subfolders,
  185. whether it should reset itself when you change folders, and whether to
  186. use Type-ahead search (this is a search which results update dynamically
  187. if you pause in the typing).
  188. </para>
  189. <para>
  190. When you hit Enter after having specified the search string, the Message
  191. List will shrink to present you with only the matching messages. If you
  192. set the search to be recursive, any subfolder of the current one that
  193. has matching emails will change its icon to a magnifying glass icon.
  194. This way, you can search in your whole mailbox at once. If the search is
  195. in Sticky mode, the filter will stay applied when you go to another
  196. folder. This can be disturbing at first, as you can forget about it, but
  197. is useful in some cases, for example if you want to search in the body
  198. of emails and are not sure of which folder contains the searched email:
  199. a recursive search on the body of emails in a whole mailbox can be
  200. really slow.
  201. </para>
  202. </section>
  203. </section>