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author | Andre Klapper <a9016009@gmx.de> | 2012-02-18 21:57:59 +0800 |
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committer | Andre Klapper <a9016009@gmx.de> | 2012-02-18 21:57:59 +0800 |
commit | b5b802227537fe441f2fcb7cdd7cfee1ca5d6295 (patch) | |
tree | 30c8dd4638d708968d9c2f3a36b47e22a879dd8c /help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page | |
parent | f38de886e8000e75d1fd0b8c8254a3012a6c1c0d (diff) | |
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User Docs: Use <cmd> tag consistently
Diffstat (limited to 'help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page')
-rw-r--r-- | help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page b/help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page index 24475439c4..9b26ebff6b 100644 --- a/help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page +++ b/help/C/mail-filters-conditions.page @@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ <p>Filters based on the mailing list the message came from. This filter might miss messages from some list servers, because it checks for the X-BeenThere header, which is used to identify mailing lists or other redistributors of mail. Mail from list servers that do not set X-BeenThere properly are not be caught by these filters.</p></item> <item><p>Regex Match:</p> -<p>(For programmers only) If you know your way around a <link href="https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Regular_expression">regex</link>, or regular expression, this option allows you to search for complex patterns of letters, so that you can find, for example, all words that start with a and end with m, and are between six and fifteen letters long, or all messages that declare a particular header twice. For information about how to use regular expressions, check the man page for the grep command.</p></item> +<p>(For programmers only) If you know your way around a <link href="https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Regular_expression">regex</link>, or regular expression, this option allows you to search for complex patterns of letters, so that you can find, for example, all words that start with a and end with m, and are between six and fifteen letters long, or all messages that declare a particular header twice. For information about how to use regular expressions, check the man page for the <cmd>grep</cmd> command.</p></item> <item><p>Source Account:</p> <p>Filters messages according the server you got them from. This is most useful if you use multiple POP mail accounts.</p></item> |