The Main Window: Evolution Basics
After Evolution starts up, you will
see the main window, which looks a lot
like in . On the left of
the main window are the
shortcut bar and the
tree-view. 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 a welcome message.
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 configure
Evolution to start with a
different view, or without the shortcut
bar or tree view.
The Shortcut Bar
The buttons in the shortcut bar give
you quick access to the different functions that
Evolution provides.
The buttons in the shortcut bar are:
Today, which will bring up a summary
of any new messages you've recieved, along with the tasks and
appointments you have lined up for today.
Inbox, which will show you all
of your email. Your Inbox is also where you can
access Evolution's tools to filter, sort, organize,
and search your mail.
The Calendar, which can store
appointments for you. Connected to a network, you
can use it to keep a group of people on schedule and
up to date.
The Contacts tool 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.
The Tasks tool combines a "to
do" list with reminders to help you keep track of
daily events.
Notes is your catch-all
notepad: write haiku, take down
messages from phone conversations, or keep small
things organized.
If you prefer to use a keyboard shortcut, or hot
key, you can use those instead. They're
shown... (INSERT DESCRIPTION) You can also set your own hot
keys for functions that don't have any; this is covered in
. If you're using the keyboard
shortcuts you may also want to hide the shortcut
bar by selecting Hide/Show Shortcut
Bar from the MENU menu.
The Tree View
The tree view is the most comprehensive way to
get to your information: it can show you everything you've
stored with Evolution
appointments, address cards, emails, and so forth.
The tree view display presents your
data like a file tree— it
starts small at the top, and branches downwards. There are a
few folders you will always see, because they're at the top.
On my computer, they are: (ch. to itemizedlist w/descriptions?)
Local MailRemote MailAddress BookCalendarTrash.
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:
SomethingSomethingSomething.
Context-Sensitive Help
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, right-clicking and
choosing Help is a good way to
find out.
If a folder has other folders in it, there will be a plus
sign next to it. Click on the plus sign, and you will see
the other folders inside. This may change in the future to
something more attractive, like triangles that drop down as
you click on them to display the rest of the tree.
Any time new information arrives in a folder, that folder
will be highlighted, or its label displayed as bold
text. You can learn more about customizing
Evolution alerts and appearance
in .
(CHANGE that title! THIS SECTION BELONGS SOMEWHERE ELSE!)
You can drag the folders inside the tree view to change
their order or put one folder inside another. To delete a
folder, you can drag it into the trash folder. The same
goes for individual messages, appointments, and address
cards, whether they're in the tree
view or not: drag them where you want them, and
they will go there. (IS THIS TRUE?)
You can also use the right-click menu to
move, rename, and delete folders.
Delete function from the
right-click menu.
Once you've familiarized yourself with the main
window you can start doing things with it.
We'll start with email: you've got a letter waiting for you
already.