Compose
Squirrelmail is licensed under the GPL and the following text was taken from the Squirrelmail documentation with permission.
The Compose menu choice will take you to a new Compose page.
Here you will find several fields and a couple of buttons.
Depending on how you got to the compose view, some of these
fields may already be filled in.
- From
The From: field will only be displayed if you have enabled multiple
identities (through the Options, Personal Preferences menu). If you've done
so you can choose which identity you want to use, i.e. which name and
email address appear as the From-line of your message.
- To
Next is the To: field. In this field you should
enter the email address of the person or persons you are sending a
message to. You may enter as many addresses as you like, separating
them with a comma. One may also press the "Addresses" button to fill
in the field. Don't worry if the entire address is not displayed.
The field is a fixed length, but everything you put in it will be used,
even though it might scroll to the right or left.
- Cc
Next is the CC: field. CC is an abbreviation for Carbon
Copy. If you wish to send someone else a copy of the message
here is where you would do that. Think of this in the same way a memo
is laid out. You can have as many people as you like in the To:,
CC:, and BCC: fields. Only the people to whom the message
has direct impact would be in the To: field while recipients to
whom this is possibly only informative would be in the CC: and
BCC: fields.
- Bcc
BCC is an abbreviation for Blind Carbon Copy.
Use this to send someone a copy of the email without the
recipients in the To: or CC: fields knowing about it.
- Subject
Type in a relevant heading here. Remember, email can be a great time
saver and an accurate subject line is one big reason.
- Addresses Button
This button will open the address book after a search box is presented.
Something must be entered in the search box to retrieve a result.
If all addresses in the address book are required, press the List All button.
The address book has enough functionality
that it deserves its own section. More detailed information is
available in the "Addresses" chapter.
- Save Draft button
If you've been composing a message but for some reason aren't ready
to send it yet, you can use this button to save the message in the
Drafts folder. If later you want to finish the message and send it out,
go to the Drafts folder, open the message and you will return to the
compose page with your message filled in.
- Priority
If enabled by your system administrator, at the right of the
buttons a drop down list "Priority" is available. Here you can
select, surprisingly, the priority of this message. A high-priority
message might be presented in a different way by the recepient's
mail program. Note that excessive use of this function will devalue its
effect.
- Message Body
The large empty box is for whatever you want to put there. If a
signature file has been saved it will appear here as well. This is
where you type the body of your message.
- Attach
Located at the bottom of the Compose page, this feature allows you to
include a file with your email. The file must be located on your
local machine or network to be attached. A browse button is
present so you may search through your directory structure and click
on the file to include. Alternatively you may type directly into the
attach field if you know the full path and exact file name. Simply
press the Add button to list the selected file as an attachment and it
will appear below.
Once at least one file is presented for attachment another button is
revealed. Deletion of one or more attached files is accomplished by
selecting the offending file or files and pressing the delete selected
attachments button.
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