From 7acab8b24cd9e7e2e32211e77d2a5c2eae1c4bb0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: nobody Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2001 15:43:54 +0000 Subject: This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create tag 'release-0-2-91'. svn path=/tags/release-0-2-91/; revision=11578 --- doc/es/usage-mainwindow.sgml | 453 ------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 453 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 doc/es/usage-mainwindow.sgml (limited to 'doc/es/usage-mainwindow.sgml') diff --git a/doc/es/usage-mainwindow.sgml b/doc/es/usage-mainwindow.sgml deleted file mode 100644 index 44dd90350a..0000000000 --- a/doc/es/usage-mainwindow.sgml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,453 +0,0 @@ - - - - La Ventana Principal: Conceptos Básicos de Evolution - - Start Evolution by selecting - Main Panel Menu - Applications - Evolution or by typing - evolution at the command line. The first time - you run the program, it will create a directory called - evolution in your home directory, where it - will keep all your Evolution-related - files. - - - After Evolution starts - up, you will see the main window, with the - Inbox open. It should look a lot like the - picture in . On the left of - the main window is the shortcut - bar, with several buttons in it. Just underneath the - title bar is a series of menus in the menu - bar, and below that, the tool - bar with buttons for different functions. The largest - part of the main window is taken up by the - actual Inbox, where messages are listed - and displayed. If you're running the program for the first time, - you'll have just one message: a welcome from Ximian. - - - -
- Evolution Main Window and Inbox - - Evolution Main Window - - - -
- -
- - - - The Way Evolution Looks - - The appearance of both Evolution - and GNOME is very easy to - customize, so your screen might not look like this picture. - You might decide to have Evolution - start with the calendar and a folder bar, or with the contact - manager occupying the entire window. - - - - - - La Barra de Atajos - - Evolution's most important job is - to give you access to your information and help you use it - quickly. One way it does that is through the - shortcut bar, the column on the left - hand side of the main window. The large buttons with names - like Inbox and - Contacts are the shortcuts, and you can - select different groups of shortcuts by clicking the - rectangular group buttons. - - - The shortcut group buttons are Evolution - Shortcuts and Internet - Directories. When you click on them, they'll slide - up and down to give you access to different sorts of shortcuts. - When you first start Evolution, you - are looking at the Evolution Shortcuts - category. If you click Internet - Directories, it will slide up and you'll see buttons - for the Bigfoot and - Netcenter directories, as well as any - others you or your system administrator may have added. You can - add more groups by right-clicking on the background of the - shortcut bar and selecting Menu - Group. Internet directories behave a lot like - the local contact manager, which is covered in . - - - Take a look at the Evolution Shortcuts - again. The shortcut buttons in that category are: - - - - - - - - Executive Summary: - - - Start your day here. The Executive summary gives you - lists of new or important messages, daily appointments - and urgent tasks. You can customize its appearance and - content, and use it to access Evolution services. - - - - - - - Inbox: - - - Click the Inbox button to start - reading your mail. Your Inbox is also where you can - access Evolution's tools to filter, sort, organize, and - search your mail. - - - - - - Calendar: - - - The Calendar can store your appointments and To do lists - for you. Connected to a network, you can use it to keep - a group of people on schedule and up to date. - - - - - - Tasks: - - - A full-size view of your calendar's task pad. - - - - - - Contacts: - - - The Contact Manager holds your addresses, phone numbers, - and contact information. Like calendar information, - contact data can be synchronized with hand-held devices - and shared over a network. - - - - - - - - - - If you don't like the shortcut bar, you can use the folder bar - or the menu bar to navigate the main window. Press - - Ctrl - O - - to choose from a list of folders you'd like to visit, or use the - drop-down folder bar. You can hide and show the folder bar and - the shortcut bar by selecting those items in the - View menu. - - - - Trucos de la Barra de Atajos - - To remove a shortcut from the shortcut bar, right-click on it - and select Remove. To add one, - select File - New Evolution Bar - Shortcut . - - - To change the way the shortcut bar looks, right-click in an - empty space on the shortcut bar. From the menu that appears, - you can select icon sizes. - - - - - - La Barra de Carpetas - - The folder bar is a more comprehensive - way to view the information you've stored with - Evolution. It displays all your - appointments, address cards, and email in a tree that's a lot - like a file - tree— it starts small at the top, and branches - downwards. On most computers, there will be three or four - folders at the base. First is the Local - folder, which holds all the Evolution - data that's stored on your computer. After that come - Virtual Folders, or virtual folders, discussed in - , followed by any - IMAP mail folders you may - have available to you over your network. Lastly, there are - External Directories, LDAP contact directories stored on a - network. - - - - A typical Local folder contains the following folders: - - - - Calendar, for appointments and - event listings. - - - - - Contacts, for address cards. - - - - - Inbox, for incoming mail. - - - - - Drafts, for messages you started and didn't finish. - - - - - Sent, for sent mail. - - - - - Trash, which is used to store - messages you don't want, but keep around just in case you - change your mind. - - - - - Outbox, for messages you have written - but not yet sent. This will be empty unless you use - Evolution while offline. - - - - - - - - Navegando sin la Barra de Carpetas - - You don't need the folder bar or the shortcut bar to move - around the main window. You can use Tab to - switch from one part of the window to another, and the folder - menu on the right side of the window just below the toolbar - to move about the folder tree. - - - - - To create a new folder, select - File New - Folder. You'll be asked where you want to - put it, and what kind of folder it should be. You can choose - from three types: Mail, for storing mail, - Calendar for storing calendars, and - Contacts for storing contacts. - - - - Las Carpetas Tienen Limitaciones - - Los calendarios deben ir en carpetas de calendarios, el correo - en carpetas de correo, y los contactos en carpetas de contactos. - - - - - Right-clicking will bring up a menu for just about anything - in GNOME, and Evolution is no - exception. If you right-click on a folder, you'll have a - menu with the following options: - - FIXME, for another purpose. - Something else, for another purpose. - . - - - - Ayuda Sensible al Contexto - - GNOME 2.0 will support context-sensitive help, which means you - can almost always get help on an item by right-clicking it. - If you're not sure what something is, or don't know what you - can do with it, choosing Help from - the right-click menu is a good way to find out. - - - - - Any time new information arrives in a folder, that folder label - is displayed in bold text. - - - To delete a folder, right-click it and select - Delete from the menu that pops up. - To change the order of folders, or put one inside another, use - drag-and-drop. To move individual - messages, appointments, and address cards between folders, you - can do the same thing: drag them where you want them, and - they'll go. - - - - La Barra de Menú - - The menu bar's contents will always - provide all the possible actions for any given view of your - data. That means that, depending on the context, menu bar items - will change. If you're looking at your Inbox, most of the menu - items will relate to mail; some will relate to other components - of Evolution and some, especially - those in the File Menu will relate to the - application as a whole. The contents of the menu bar are - described in . - - - - - File Menu - - - Anything even related to a file or to the operations - of the application generally falls under this - menu: creating things, saving them to disk, - printing them, and quitting the program itself. - - - - - - Edit Menu - - The Edit menu holds - useful tools that help you edit text and move it around. - - - - - View Menu - - This menu lets you decide how Evolution - should look. Some of the features control the appearance of - Evolution as a whole, and others - the way a particular kind of information appears. - - - - - Settings Menu - Tools for configuring, changing, and - setting up go here. For mail, that means things like - Mail Configuration and the - Virtual Folder Editor. For the - Calendar and the Contact - Manager, it's color, network, and layout - configuration. - - - - Help Menu - - Select among these items to open the - Help Browser - and read the Evolution manual. - - - - - - Other menus, like Folder, - Message, and Actions, - appear only occasionally. Message and - Folder, for example, have commands that only - relate to email, so they're only available when you're looking at - email. - - - Once you've familiarized yourself with the main - window you can start doing things with it. We'll - start with your email inbox, since you've got a letter waiting - for you already. - - -
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