On 11/16/2011 5:49 PM, Mike Easter wrote:
> Anthony Buckland wrote:
>> I find some basic operations I was used to in Outlook Express seem
>> to be out of reach.
>>
>> 1) How do I remove messages I'm through with from my downloads?
> For news messages, OE provides no 'get rid of' function for news messages (which are not yours).
Mike apparently assumes that TB Bug 250141 afflicts Outlook Express too,
but it's always actually been confined to TB :)
Mr. Buckland doesn't mean that he can't delete news posts from Outlook Express
(where the "delete" key has always worked splendidly well),
but that he always _could_ do so on OE,
until he started using TB as an OE replacement!
DOWNLOADED news posts ARE "mine" (they are _copies_ stored on _my_ computer),
and the DELETE key deletes them with no trouble at all from Outlook Express.
CANCEL (un-post from the news server) is what you can't do (or should not do)
for messages that you did not post, although the mechanisms for preventing this
range from useful to stupid or non-existent in various clients (and servers).
> To me, the most 'straightforward' (honest, unambiguous) way
> is to mark messages as read and hide the read messages.
As you can see, seven years of persistent TB Bug 250141
have brainwashed even people who are normally very sensible :)
The nature of Bug 250141 is that formerly you could not delete
even your own DOWNLOADED COPIES of news posts (or their headers) from TB,
where you were instead told about the prohibition of CANCELing them,
whereas now the "delete" function is grayed out, so that you STILL
can't delete them, which is of course a great improvement,
in that you are now prevented from even trying :)
The peculiar justification for requiring the user to go through
a severe hazing ritual to find out how to un-gray the "delete" function
is that there is "no undo" if you delete a post (or its headers),
so what TB does, per developers' air-tight logic,
is to ensure instead that there's NO DO !!!
(hey, you need not worry about undoing what you can't even do, is there?)
Ron Hunter also said:
> Select the message, or messages, and press 'delete' key.
Not yet -- there are two prerequisites to making TB act normally:
o Use a sufficiently recent version of TB
(Mr. Buckland's post is via TB 8.0, which ought to be adequate)
o Get the secret info necessary to enable the "delete" function (and key):
<
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=250141#c42> "Comment 42"
As you can see by subsequent comments to that bug report,
normal users do not consider that bug yet "fixed,"
because most users will never find the "secret,"
and will remain stuck with an indefinite "NO DO" situation,
no better than was the case during the previous seven years.
I have suggested that what would really complete the "fix"
is what you see so many other programs doing -- leave "delete" ENABLED,
cause a pop-up to appear the first time used, asking whether the user
is okay with the "no undo" thing, with a "Do not ask me again" check box
to shut the thing up forever afterwards (the check box should take care of
_automatically_ setting any internal option to remember that the user said OK).
But hey, I'm one of those people who wants the finer things of life
to be available for the masses, whereas TB is meant to be usable
only for the privileged few :)
Where's Mozilla Messaging's headquarters, anyway,
so that we can get an "occupy" thing going down there? ;-)
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