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From: PA Bear [MS MVP] on
If the "Include subfolders" option is checked, the subfolder name should be
displayed in the Results.

roricka wrote:
> When I use Find Message (Ctrl-Shift-F), the resulting list only says the
> folder name of the mail. If I've created subfolders, it doesn't tell me
> how to find that folder, i.e., the "path" to the folder. Is there a way
> to do this. I have a fairly deep structure, and sometimes I have to
> spend a lot of time finding the location of a found email.
>
> How do other people handle this problem?
>
> Thanks.

From: Ron Sommer on
I hope you have a good backup.

Ever folder (and subfolder) in OE is stored as a separate dbx file.
Folders.dbx keeps your folder tree information. If folders.dbx would ever
become corrupted, you would lose your folders showing as subfolders.
Each dbx file has a distinct name. A number in parentheses is added to the
folder name when more than one folder has the same name. You should do the
same, so you do not have folders with the same name.

I don't have my machine with OE on at the moment, so I can't test this. (It
works in WLM.)
Right click on your found message and mark as unread. If you have
automatically expand folders with unread messages checked, the folder will
expand and have a (1) behind the folder name.
--
Ron Sommer
MVP - Windows Live Mail

"roricka" wrote in message news:roricka.66ccc93(a)outlookbanter.com...


Indeed PA Bear, it tells me the name of the sub FOLDER. But my question
is, what is the PATH to that folder? Let's say it's 3 subfolders deep,
and I gave it an obscure name. Or let's say I have several subfolders
(under different parent folders) with the same name. Simply having the
name of the subfolder doesn't give me enough info to find the email (or,
more importantly, OTHER emails that may be in that same subfolder.) You
dig?? How do I figure that out, without having to expand every folder
and look down every path?

'PA Bear [MS MVP Wrote:
> ;350242']If the "Include subfolders" option is checked, the subfolder
> name should be
> displayed in the Results.
>
> roricka wrote:-
> When I use Find Message (Ctrl-Shift-F), the resulting list only says
> the
> folder name of the mail. If I've created subfolders, it doesn't tell
> me
> how to find that folder, i.e., the "path" to the folder. Is there a
> way
> to do this. I have a fairly deep structure, and sometimes I have to
> spend a lot of time finding the location of a found email.
>
> How do other people handle this problem?
>
> Thanks. -




--
roricka

From: PA Bear [MS MVP] on
WYSIWYG.

None of you user-created folders should have the same name. Rename any such
folders to avoid such self-made confusion (e.g., Saved Messages1, Saved
Messages2, etc.; Archive2007, Archive2008, etc.).


roricka wrote:
> Indeed PA Bear, it tells me the name of the sub FOLDER. But my question
> is, what is the PATH to that folder? Let's say it's 3 subfolders deep,
> and I gave it an obscure name. Or let's say I have several subfolders
> (under different parent folders) with the same name. Simply having the
> name of the subfolder doesn't give me enough info to find the email (or,
> more importantly, OTHER emails that may be in that same subfolder.) You
> dig?? How do I figure that out, without having to expand every folder
> and look down every path?
>
> 'PA Bear [MS MVP Wrote:
>> ;350242']If the "Include subfolders" option is checked, the subfolder
>> name should be
>> displayed in the Results.
>>
>> roricka wrote:-
>> When I use Find Message (Ctrl-Shift-F), the resulting list only says
>> the
>> folder name of the mail. If I've created subfolders, it doesn't tell
>> me
>> how to find that folder, i.e., the "path" to the folder. Is there a
>> way
>> to do this. I have a fairly deep structure, and sometimes I have to
>> spend a lot of time finding the location of a found email.
>>
>> How do other people handle this problem?
>>
>> Thanks. -

From: Ron Sommer on
Including the full path in the folder name will create the problem of
displaying the names in the folder list.

I am trying to figure out why you would need to know what the full path is.
You can open, copy to another folder,or move to another folder by right
clicking on the message.
The only thing that you can't do is open the folder to view all of the
messages in that folder.

You are correct. There is no way to find the path.
--
Ron Sommer

"roricka" wrote in message news:roricka.66e1e00(a)outlookbanter.com...


snipped
Look, if OE has a weakness, that you can't find folder paths, then sure,
each folder should include its path in its name. Is this the case?

Thank you for the suggestion about marking unread. I have dozens of
folders containing unread mail so it doesn't help, I'm afraid, but it is
a good idea. However, in answer to my original question, I am assuming
that your answer is "there is no way to do that" -- i.e., there is no
way to obtain the path to the found parent folder. Or more specifically,
there is no way to find the path of a given stored email. Is that
correct?


snipped

From: PA Bear [MS MVP] on
Expand all folders in Folders pane and look for it.

roricka wrote:
> May I speak frankly (and gimme a break -- everyone has a right to vent a
> tad)? I asked a simple question. How do I find the path of the folder
> that is reported when I do a Find Message in OE. If you don't understand
> the question, all you have to do is say I don't understand (i.e., reread
> my original post. It's clear "check the subfolder box" couldn't be the
> answer I was looking for). And if you think it is impossible, all you
> have to say is I think it is impossible. What I am really really tired
> of is people giving unsolicited behavioral advice. Did I ask for
> behavioral advice? Don't get ****ed. Hear me out. I wrote that I might
> have duplicate folder names in case you were to write, as is incredibly
> common, "well, why would you ever want to do..." or " well, why would
> you ever set up like..." etc. etc. etc. I DON"T HAVE FOLDERS WITH
> DUPLICATE NAMES. I only mentioned that as an example where just having
> the parent folder might not be enough. And besides, you are wrong. There
> is absolutely nothing wrong with having folders with duplicate names. Of
> course I have good backups. How patronizing of you to ask me about that.
> Look, if OE has a weakness, that you can't find folder paths, then sure,
> each folder should include its path in its name. Is this the case?
>
> Thank you for the suggestion about marking unread. I have dozens of
> folders containing unread mail so it doesn't help, I'm afraid, but it is
> a good idea. However, in answer to my original question, I am assuming
> that your answer is "there is no way to do that" -- i.e., there is no
> way to obtain the path to the found parent folder. Or more specifically,
> there is no way to find the path of a given stored email. Is that
> correct?
>
>
> 'PA Bear [MS MVP Wrote:
>> ;350254']WYSIWYG.
>>
>> None of you user-created folders should have the same name. Rename any
>> such
>> folders to avoid such self-made confusion (e.g., Saved Messages1, Saved
>>
>> Messages2, etc.; Archive2007, Archive2008, etc.).
>>
>>
>> roricka wrote:-
>> Indeed PA Bear, it tells me the name of the sub FOLDER. But my
>> question
>> is, what is the PATH to that folder? Let's say it's 3 subfolders deep,
>> and I gave it an obscure name. Or let's say I have several subfolders
>> (under different parent folders) with the same name. Simply having the
>> name of the subfolder doesn't give me enough info to find the email
>> (or,
>> more importantly, OTHER emails that may be in that same subfolder.)
>> You
>> dig?? How do I figure that out, without having to expand every folder
>> and look down every path?
>>
>> 'PA Bear [MS MVP Wrote:-
>> ;350242']If the "Include subfolders" option is checked, the subfolder
>> name should be
>> displayed in the Results.
>>
>> roricka wrote:-
>> When I use Find Message (Ctrl-Shift-F), the resulting list only says
>> the
>> folder name of the mail. If I've created subfolders, it doesn't tell
>> me
>> how to find that folder, i.e., the "path" to the folder. Is there a
>> way
>> to do this. I have a fairly deep structure, and sometimes I have to
>> spend a lot of time finding the location of a found email.
>>
>> How do other people handle this problem?
>>
>> Thanks. - --
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