I recently developed a webmail client for POP3/POP3S so that I could use native
XMail support and webmail. The way the inbox is designed, messages are released
in reverse order of their MTA assigned ID number, ie 1 is on the bottom, 2
next, a googol on the top, etc. This worked fine for a
I have the same problem with NOCC , I think I was the only one.
and my english is too bad to to post
Dustin C. Hatch escribioacute;: I recently developed a webmail client for
POP3/POP3S so that I could use native XMail support and webmail. The way the
inbox is designed, messages are released
Which number are you using for the message ID number? How are you getting
this number?
At 07:04 3/30/2005, Dustin C. Hatch wrote:
I recently developed a webmail client for POP3/POP3S so that I could use
native XMail support and webmail. The way the inbox is designed, messages
are released in
On Wed, 30 Mar 2005, Dustin C. Hatch wrote:
I recently developed a webmail client for POP3/POP3S so that I could use
native XMail support and webmail. The way the inbox is designed,
messages are released in reverse order of their MTA assigned ID number,
ie 1 is on the bottom, 2 next, a
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005, Jeffrey Laramie wrote:
Hello All,
I need some help updating the python script that intergrates XMail with the
mailman list manager. Unfortunately I didn't write the script, and since my
programming skills are quite limited and don't include python, my attempts to
Hi,
I have a recent problem with Microsoft Outlook build 10.0.2627 (from Office
XP, not Outlook Express).
After send message from Outllook, the message has delivered without the
header X-AuthUser and not pass for filter (filters.post-data.tab).
When posted by Microsoft Outlook Express or others
1. If the sender uses capitalization in the list name, XMail correctly
recognizes it and executes the correct command alias but the script
doesn't match the name to the correct list.
You might want to use a convetion for file names, and than use lower() to
convert email addresses:
Okay, I guess I should clarify what I mean by message ID numbers. PHP downloads
the messages over POP3 as you would using telnet. The message IDs that it uses
are just like you would using the command line to read mail:
LIST
+OK 15 70871
1 5427
2 1826
3 16834
4 4043
5 3875
6 2373
7 15345
8
As Davide said, those numbers are only valid for the specific POP3 session
that you received them in. Future sessions are not guaranteed to have the
same numbers for the same messages.
You should use the UIDL numbers. Retrieve them as:
+OK Maildrop has 4 messages (12788 bytes)
UIDL
+OK 4
1
Okay, I guess I should clarify what I mean by message ID numbers. PHP
downloads the messages over POP3 as you would using telnet. The message
IDs that it uses are just like you would using the command line to read
mail:
LIST
+OK 15 70871
1 5427
2 1826
3 16834
4 4043
5 3875
[snip]
Look at the
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