Hello RegEx experts,
I usually BCC to myself, so that I have the outgoing emails in my Inbox. That's
in my templates. My choice.
For the different departments, we also have group emails. These are set up so
that any email for that group will be auto-forwarded on the server to each
member of
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On Wed, 31 Jan 2001 07:45:16 -0500, Jan wrote these words of wisdom:
EF I've been a programmer for 20 years, and in my way of thinking
EF this statement would cause the contents of %ABofromFIRSTNAME to
EF be replaced with the contents of
A.,
On Wednesday, January 31, 2001, 10:21:13 AM, you wrote:
ACM It's really just the syntax that's being criticised. '='
ACM means 'equal to'. That's what it means when used in all
ACM other macros except in the context of address book macros
ACM where it means 'if no value found then ='.
Yes,
TBUDL,
I hope that this request is simple enough that I can post here
as opposed to TBTECH. I don't know much at all about regular
expressions, but I'd like to request one that I can use with my
reply templates.
The default reply template uses %OFromFName as the greeting.
What I
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On Tue, 30 Jan 2001 19:03:45 -0800, Elden graced us with these
comments:
...snip...
EF The default reply template uses %OFromFName as the greeting. What
EF I would like to do is use the first name in my address book entry
EF for the original
A.,
On Tuesday, January 30, 2001, 7:14:09 PM, you wrote:
ACM You don't need a regex for this.
ACM Use this macro: %ABofromFIRSTNAME="%OFROMFNAME"
ACM It will look for the address book first name and use it. If there's no
ACM address book entry, then it will fall back on the original 'from'
ACM
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On Tue, 30 Jan 2001 19:28:48 -0800, Elden graced us with these
comments:
EF Thank you much.
You're welcome. :=)
ACM The address book macros are explained in the help.
EF Hmm, ok sorry for not looking there first.
That's not what I meant. I was
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