[MlMt] Driving me nuts..
Verdon Vaillancourt
verdonv at gmail.com
Tue Jan 15 19:28:43 EST 2019
Also very interesting to see the ways other people adapt this wonderful
application to suit their workflow. Thanks for sharing!
v
On 15 Jan 2019, at 17:51, Zvi Biener wrote:
> Just be careful to reverse the changes by pressing the key again (FYI,
> the mailbox will have a little mark next to it when the filter key is
> applied). Messages that are 'disappeared' disappear everywhere(!!): in
> SmartMailboxes that might catch them, in searches, etc. It's like they
> are not there at all.
>
> One way to do use this FilterKey effectively, I think: 1) I have my
> mailboxes display a counter of unread messages. 2) I've key-bound 'n'
> to unset the FilterKey of the currently selected mailbox, go to the
> next mailbox that has a count (that has unread messages), and apply
> the FilterKey. I run through all my mailboxes by pressing n multiple
> times. 3) I have 'c' bound to mark as read all the unread messages in
> a folder. This is very useful for junky mailboxes, since it means I
> can go through them very quickly, by just pressing 'n' then 'c',
> repeat. 4) I've bound 'i' to unset the FilterKey of the current
> mailbox, go back to the Inbox, and restore a previously memorized set
> of expanded/collapsed mailboxes. Essentially, this gets me back to the
> Inbox and collapses all the mailboxes that pressing 'n' repeatedly
> expanded. Back to a clean state, with all messages available to
> smartMailboxes, etc. I can send you the bindings off-list, if you'd
> like.
>
> Z
>
> On 15 Jan 2019, at 16:51, Edward Thome wrote:
>
>> On 13 Jan 2019, at 9:18, Zvi Biener wrote:
>>
>>> I'm a huge fan of the toggleFilterKey action. If you add a
>>> keybinding like:
>>>
>>> "x" = ( "toggleFilterKey:", "unread");
>>>
>>> Pressing it in will immediate show you only the unread messages,
>>> effectively disappearing all the others.
>>>
>>> Actually, I have:
>>>
>>> "x" = ( "toggleFilterKey:", "unread", "makeFirstResponder:",
>>> "mainOutline", "selectFirstMessageRow:");
>>>
>>> Which also includes moving the focus on the messages, but that's not
>>> essential.
>>>
>>> Zvi
>>
>>
>> Cool!
>> Thanks!
>> Ed
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