Thunderbird:Help Documentation:Finding Information in Messages: Difference between revisions

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=Using Mail Views=
=Using Mail Views=


Another quick search utilizes mail views. Select a view from the `View:' list, right above the message list, and all messages that fit the view's criterion will be shown, and all others hidden.
Another quick search utilizes mail views. Select a view from the 'View:' list, right above the message list, and all messages that fit the view's criterion will be shown, and all others hidden.


Here is a list of the default views in Thunderbird (you may create your own):
Here is a list of the default views in Thunderbird (you may create your own):
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==Customizing Views==
==Customizing Views==


You can create your own views, change existing views, and delete views from the `Customize Message Views' dialog box. To bring up this dialog box, select `Customize...' from the `View:' list or from the View > Messages menu.
You can create your own views, change existing views, and delete views from the 'Customize Message Views' dialog box. To bring up this dialog box, select 'Customize...' from the 'View:' list or from the View > Messages menu.


=More Complex Searches: The 'Search Messages' Window=
=More Complex Searches: The 'Search Messages' Window=

Revision as of 22:43, 1 January 2006

Using the Quick Search Box

Thunderbird makes it easy to search within messages. Just type a name or email address into the 'Subject or Sender' search box near the top right corner of the main application window. It also works for finding messages with a specific subject.

To search for specific words in an email message, click the magnifying glass on the left side of the search box, select 'Entire Message', and enter your desired text.

When you use the quick search box, Thunderbird shows the search results in the main window message list. To show all messages again, click on the Close button to the right of the quick search box.

Using Mail Views

Another quick search utilizes mail views. Select a view from the 'View:' list, right above the message list, and all messages that fit the view's criterion will be shown, and all others hidden.

Here is a list of the default views in Thunderbird (you may create your own):

All
Selected by default. Shows all messages.
Unread
Shows unread messages only.
Label views
Shows messages with a particular label previously applied by you. The default labels are:
  • Important
  • Work
  • Personal
  • To Do
  • Later
People I Know
Shows messages from people in your address book.
Recent Mail
Shows messages less than a day old.
Last 5 Days
Not Junk
Messages which have not been marked as junk mail by Thunderbird or by you.
Has Attachments

Customizing Views

You can create your own views, change existing views, and delete views from the 'Customize Message Views' dialog box. To bring up this dialog box, select 'Customize...' from the 'View:' list or from the View > Messages menu.

More Complex Searches: The 'Search Messages' Window

Thunderbird supports more complicated searches in the 'Search Messages' window, accessible through

  • the Edit > Find > Search Messages... menu item
  • right-clicking in the preview pane on any account or mailbox name and then clicking 'search messages'.

To quit the search window, click the window's close button, press Ctrl+W or press Esc

Specifying Location

In the 'Search Messages' window, first specify where to search. In the 'Search for messages in:' list, select the account (and folder, if any) to search in. Say you have an account called 'mail.isp.net' and you want to search the Inbox. Drop down the list, move the mouse over the account name, then click on 'Inbox' when the folder list appears as a sublist of the account list. If you want to search the entire account, click 'choose this folder' from the sublist.

Next, uncheck the 'Search subfolder' checkbox if you do not want to search subfolders. A mail folder can contain other mail folders called subfolders. Mail folders are subfolders of account 'folders'.

Specifying Criteria

Next, set up criteria for matching messages, such as a specific sender, send date or unread status.

Criteria are presented as a table of drop-down lists with three columns. Each row represents a single criterion. Add or remove criteria by clicking the 'More' and 'Fewer' buttons just below the criteria table.

The columns of the table are:

The name of the criterion
That is, what you want to check. This may be the subject of the message, the sender, the age in days, priority, attachment status, recipients, and so on.
The comparison
That is, whether the subject is the same as, different from, more or less or equal, and so on. For different criteria, the available comparisons are different.
The value that you specify
For example, if you want to specify that a message must be less than 6 days old, you would type '6' here.

Example:

You want to match all messages which are precisely 6 days old. Select 'Age In Days' in the first drop-down list, 'is' in the second and type '6' in the third column box.

Multiple Criteria

When you set up more than one criterion, you have the choice of matching any or all the criteria by using the button near the top of the 'search messages' pane (immediately under the search subolders checkbox). For example, suppose you specify the criteria 'Age in days is 6' and 'From contains dave'. Then if you specify 'Match all of the following', the search will list only those messages where both criteria are met. If you specify 'Match any of the following' the search is for messages where either criterion is met, so it will list all messages where the From field includes the letters 'dave' and all those which are precisely 6 days old.

Results

Once you've specified the criteria, click the 'Search' button on the top-right corner of the window and the search results will appear as a list of messages in the lower half of the window. (There is a divider between the criteria and the results that you can drag to adjust the space taken up by the two parts.)

The results list is a message list like in the main Thunderbird window, except there is no context menu for the messages.

Below the results list is a row of buttons to manipulate the search results. The buttons are:

Open
Opens a message; same as double-clicking it.
File
A drop-down menu which lets you move messages to another folder.
Delete
Deletes a message; same as pressing the Delete key.
Open Message Folder
Opens a new Thunderbird main window, goes to the message's folder, and selects the message.
Save as Search Folder
Saves the search as a virtual folder where all matching messages appear. The practical effect of this is that these messages show up both in their original folder and in the search folder, and that each time a new message arrives that fits the search criteria, it automatically shows up in the search folder.

The 'Clear' button right below the 'Search' button erases all the criteria you have chosen.