From 55098b935c6e860424419dfd5f51a822dd8b418b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andre Klapper Date: Mon, 9 Jul 2012 20:14:33 +0200 Subject: User Docs: Use better Mallard markup --- help/C/mail-filters-not-working.page | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'help') diff --git a/help/C/mail-filters-not-working.page b/help/C/mail-filters-not-working.page index a5be03fd19..aaaaa99310 100644 --- a/help/C/mail-filters-not-working.page +++ b/help/C/mail-filters-not-working.page @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ - + April Gonzales loonycookie@gmail.com @@ -45,10 +45,10 @@ If it is still unclear why filters do not work as expected, you can enable loggi

Close Evolution.

Open the Terminal application.

Run the command gsettings set org.gnome.evolution.mail filters-log-actions true

-

Run the command gsettings set org.gnome.evolution.mail filters-log-file "~/my-filter-log". This will create a text file named "my-filter-log" in your home directory.

+

Run the command gsettings set org.gnome.evolution.mail filters-log-file "~/my-filter-log". This will create a text file named my-filter-log in your home directory.

Start Evolution.

Fetch mail to apply filters.

-

Open the file "my-filter-log" with a text editor to see which filter actions have been applied.

+

Open the file my-filter-log with a text editor to see which filter actions have been applied.

Note that you can disable filter logging again by using the command gsettings set org.gnome.evolution.mail filters-log-actions false

-- cgit