On 06/27/2014 08:34 PM, The Wanderer wrote: > On 06/27/2014 02:00 PM, Diogene Laerce wrote: > > [that someone else wrote:]
Yes I know.. I do that too.. :D >>> Please don't hijack an existing thread when you open a new topic. >>> You have done this twice on this thread which was originally titled >>> "Resizing LVM issue". > >> I didn't or at least not on purpose. I just reply to the list on a >> random message and make a new topic of it for light convenience. I >> didn't know it could do any harm. And actually, I even don't >> understand how you can know that ? Please explain, I will sleep a bit >> light less dumber tonight. ;) > > Every E-mail or newsgroup post made by a standards-compliant mail > program contains a theoretically-unique ID number, called the Message-ID > header. > > When you hit Reply on an E-mail using a modern mail client (and quite a > few non-modern ones), in addition to generating a new Message-ID for > your reply, the mail client creates another header called "In-Reply-To". > It copies the Message-ID from the original mail into this new header. > > Then, when someone receives both the original mail and your reply, their > own mail client can use these two headers to figure out that "these two > mails belong together, in this order". > > Some mail clients (such as Thunderbird) can use that information to > display a nested hierarchy of "which mail is a reply to which", which I > find very useful; others just use it for "conversation view"-type > sorting; others ignore it entirely. If someone using a mail client which > is configured to not ignore that information receives both messages, > they will immediately be able to tell that your message is a reply, even > if you changed the Subject line. Thanks ! I already feel dumbness leaving my body. :) I didn't find yet how to create such filters or if it would be useful to me, but it's very good to know. Cheers, -- “One original thought is worth a thousand mindless quotings.” “Le vrai n'est pas plus sûr que le probable.” Diogene Laerce
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