

- #OUTLOOK SHOW NOTIFICATION FOR SUBFOLDERS MAC PC#
- #OUTLOOK SHOW NOTIFICATION FOR SUBFOLDERS MAC OFFLINE#
- #OUTLOOK SHOW NOTIFICATION FOR SUBFOLDERS MAC DOWNLOAD#


* LIST (\HasNoChildren \Archive) “.” INBOX.ArchiveĪ OK List completed (0.000 + 0.000 secs). * LIST (\HasNoChildren \Trash) “.” INBOX.Trash * LIST (\HasNoChildren \Drafts) “.” INBOX.Drafts * LIST (\HasNoChildren \Sent) “.” INBOX.Sent * LIST (\HasNoChildren \Junk) “.” INBOX.Junk (commands that I enter are in bold, the server’s responses of interest are in _ bold _, and any of my comments are bold and underlined ) (Note for the casual observer… this “language” and sequence of commands is how emClient and other email clients communicate “under the hood”, “behind the scenes” with your email server) Allow me demonstrate how simple it is, using a raw telnet session connecting to a demo email account with 5 emails, several of which are unread…
#OUTLOOK SHOW NOTIFICATION FOR SUBFOLDERS MAC DOWNLOAD#
With IMAP protocol, it is not necessary to download messages to determine unread messages.
#OUTLOOK SHOW NOTIFICATION FOR SUBFOLDERS MAC OFFLINE#
However, I don’t want to “download messages for offline use”, as this would consume a large amount of space on my local PC. Thank you Olivia, I appreciate the advice. The fact is emClient already does this for the INBOX. I cannot see anything difficult about this from a programmatic perspective. If for some reason it is undesirable in some cases to have this behavior, then you could make it an option. An IMAP message is an IMAP message, no matter where it is located in folders. With all due respect, it makes NO sense to say otherwise.

OKAY…so how about we just make emClient automatically download new message headers in any subfolders? This function is no different than in the INBOX. Then, when the folder is selected, emClient downloads the message headers and changes the icon to indicate the number of new messages. Is the original poster using POP3 or IMAP? I’ll assume IMAP.Įvery other email client I have ever used (including Thunderbird) behaves as expected in this regard (shows new messages quantities in any folder).Ĭlearly, emClient is detecting/indicating new emails are present in the subfolder, as indicated by the “…” icon. To be clear, I think emClient is great so far, but of course there is always room for improvement. Please suggest some appropriate app or a way out by which I can accomplish the task.I feel that I must chime in here and say that I completely do not understand your stated reasoning why emClient cannot indicate/notify of new messages in subfolders. The apple mail app & microsoft outlook app for iOS is unable to show unread emails at one location even if those mails are in the subfolders. Many many corporations use Exchange server, and many of the employees have server side rules, i cannot for the life of me work out why mail on the iPhone is unable to identify when a folder has new mail. The only way to see if there is new mail, is to go into each folder manually, and then do a refresh on that folder in which case the mail gets picked up. In fact, you could have 100 new mails all in different folders and mail on iPhone will never indicate that you have new mail. With mail on the iphone, any email that is in the Inbox will show an icon that states you have new email, however, if an email has been moved on the server to another folder (e.g Apple) then mail on the iPhone will NOT show a notification that this folder has new mail. Now unlike Mail app, Outlook saves these rules to the server, so the email is NOT moved locally into the folder, it is done at the server level. E.g if an email comes from Apple Support Communities, it goes into the Apple Folder within outlook.
#OUTLOOK SHOW NOTIFICATION FOR SUBFOLDERS MAC PC#
In outlook (on PC or Mac) with an exchange server, you can set rules to place certain emails in certain folders. We have mailbox on exchange 2013 & using outlook 2013 at desktop & outlook/mail at iPhone & ipad.
