Server : Apache/2.4.43 (Win64) OpenSSL/1.1.1g PHP/7.4.6 System : Windows NT USER-PC 6.1 build 7601 (Windows 7 Professional Edition Service Pack 1) AMD64 User : User ( 0) PHP Version : 7.4.6 Disable Function : NONE Directory : C:/xampp/MercuryMail/RESOURCE/ |
; ; PREFIX.PM - user-defined subject prefix "ignore" list ; Use this file to create your own list of strings that ; Pegasus Mail should ignore at the start of the subject ; line when sorting by thread or sorting by subject. ; ; This file can be placed either in the user's mailbox ; directory (in which case it will be private to that user), ; or in the same directory as WINPM-32.EXE, in which case it ; will be system-wide and used by anyone who runs that copy ; of the program. ; ; Each line in this file should be an absolutely literal ; string that Pegasus Mail should check for: spaces are ; significant, both leading and trailing. Any line starting ; with ';' or '#' is regarded as a comment and is ignored, ; as are blank lines. ; ; You can enter more complex expressions by making the first ; character on the line a tilde (~). Everything that follows ; the tilde is regarded as an extended Pegasus Mail v4.1 ; regular expression, and it *must* contain the special ; sequence /h to show Pegasus Mail the point in the string ; where the prefix ends. As an example, consider this ; expression: ; ; ~RE/w[[][0-9]+][ :]/h* ; ; This tells Pegasus Mail to look for any line starting with ; the letters "RE" followed by zero or more spaces, followed ; by a '[' character, followed by one or more digits, followed ; by a ']' character, followed by either a space or a colon. ; The /h indicates that this is where the prefix ends, while ; the '*' operator is used to match the remainder of the line. ; ; The items in this sample file are exactly the same as the ; default list built into Pegasus Mail itself (the list that ; it will use automatically if this file is not present). Note ; that Pegasus Mail will check for any combination that may be ; present of any item in this file - so, using this set of ; definitions, the subject lines "Re: (FWD) re FW: X" and ; "Re: X" will sort the same. RE: RE FWD: (FWD) FW: ~RE/w[[][0-9]+][ :]/h* AW: WG: