[quote user="rgakins"]
Removing the auto-filtering (and, thus, the "little person icon") did the trick!
I don't really understand how auto-filtering on some random folder would cause
a problem in the copies-to-self folder, but that seems to be the case. Thanks
for all the help.
[/quote]
Hi,
that's exactly the way Autofiltering was meant to be. The following text is from Pegasus Mail Help:
[quote]Autofiltering is a simple way of organizing your mail into "conversations". Put simply, if you move or copy a message into a folder that has autofiltering enabled, that folder will subsequently automatically gather all the messages you receive from the sender of that message, and all the messages you send to that person. Being able to see both what you've received and sent in order allows you to read your correspondence with that person as if it were an ongoing conversation.[/quote]
So, Autofiltering it is not a substitute to mail filtering rules that is still the way to organize your mail archiving. It is quite limited, focusing only on sender's address: if message is from Sender it goes to that "autofiltered" folder. If you answer to that archived message your message will go to that same folder instead of Copyself, and building a "conversational" storage. I found it to be very useful but one must take care if other rules could interfere. Autofiltering has low precedence order.
[quote user="rgakins"]<p>Removing the auto-filtering (and, thus, the "little person icon") did the trick!</p><p>I don't really understand how auto-filtering on some random folder would cause</p><p>a problem in the copies-to-self folder, but that seems to be the case. Thanks</p><p>for all the help.
</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>[/quote]</p><p>Hi,</p><p>that's exactly the way Autofiltering was meant to be. The following text is from Pegasus Mail Help:</p><p>[quote]<i>Autofiltering is a simple way of organizing your mail into "conversations". Put simply, if you move or copy a message into a folder that has autofiltering enabled, that folder will subsequently automatically gather all the messages you receive from the sender of that message, and all the messages you send to that person. Being able to see both what you've received and sent in order allows you to read your correspondence with that person as if it were an ongoing conversation.</i>[/quote]</p><p>So, Autofiltering it is not a substitute to mail filtering rules that is still the way to organize your mail archiving. It is quite limited, focusing only on sender's address: if message is from Sender it goes to that "autofiltered" folder. If you answer to that archived message your message will go to that same folder instead of Copyself, and building a "conversational" storage. I found it to be very useful but one must take care if other rules could interfere. Autofiltering has low precedence order.
</p>
-- Euler
Pegasus Mail 4.81.1154 Windows 7 Ultimate
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