[quote user="daudelahi"]... i want my pegasus to keep attachments in copy to self folder with related emails as well, but at the moment its just saving the path of the file or attachment, i know it comes with it by default but some time i have to look for old version of sent file for match ...[/quote]
AFAIK, there's no setting for that -- someone will correct me, if I'm wrong. [EDIT: Oops! outdated even while I was typing this. Confirmed you definitely can't by David]
But, given what you want to do, here's one possible way to keep track of these attachments. Make a directory (folder) for the specific purpose of storing mail attachments. For example you could create one called "Attachments" in the "My Documents" folder. Copy anything you want to attach to a message into there, and when you send a message attach it from there. This is functionally the same as if the program were putting all attachments in messages you sent in a directory in its mail-store.
Whenever you open a sent message and want to want to look at an attachment relating to it, highlight the path to the file and copy it. Now paste that path into your browser window. Both Internet Explorer and Firefox know to add the prefix file:///. If they can display the attachment, they will; if not, they will invoke the appropriate handler.
<p>[quote user="daudelahi"]... i want my pegasus to keep attachments in copy to self folder with related emails as well, but at the moment its just saving the path of the file or attachment, i know it comes with it by default but some time i have to look for old version of sent file for match ...[/quote]</p><p> </p><p>AFAIK, there's no setting for that -- someone will correct me, if I'm wrong. [EDIT: Oops! outdated even while I was typing this. Confirmed you definitely can't by David]</p><p> </p><p>But, given what you want to do, here's one possible way to keep track of these attachments. Make a directory (folder) for the specific purpose of storing mail attachments. For example you could create one called "Attachments" in the "My Documents" folder. Copy anything you want to attach to a message into there, and when you send a message attach it from there. This is functionally the same as if the program were putting all attachments in messages you sent in a directory in its mail-store.</p><p>Whenever you open a sent message and want to want to look at an attachment relating to it, highlight the path to the file and copy it. Now paste that path into your browser window. Both Internet Explorer and Firefox know to add the prefix [color=green]file:///[/color]. If they can display the attachment, they will; if not, they will invoke the appropriate handler.</p><p> </p><p> </p>