> > > Using the manual Junk button without having a junk processor installed > > is somewhat unusual. You might consider marking messages for later > > followup (Shift-Ctrl-G) or using labels. > > what I like about Ctrl-J is that messages are immediately refiled into > Junk.
What do you do with them once they are labelled as junk? > I don't see a way to do that with Shift-Ctrl-G, and with labels > I'd need to apply a label (is there a shortcut for that?) and then apply > filters with Ctrl-Y to refile. > > Does it seem unreasonable to have a "none" option for > junk-default-plugin? Yes, essentially. The junk filter is basically a way of automatically tagging a message as possibly being unwanted. Pressing the junk button manually tags that message *so that the automated junk filter can then learn what is and is not junk*. As such having a "none" option is fairly pointless, since the junk button then has no purpose other than making the message disappear. Just do what everyone else - press the delete button if it's spam. You should also be aware that junk/no-junk is a tag on a message and the junk folder is a virtual folder. A message that is tagged as junk doesn't move anywhere, it is just hidden from view in your inbox and displayed in the virtual junk folder instead. P. _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list