On Thu, 2018-08-23 at 08:36 +0000, Gary Curtin wrote: > On 23/08/2018 10:29:55, "Andre Klapper" <ak...@gmx.net> wrote: > > > There is nothing to "ignore". The user has to accept the invitation to > > import the appointment to have it displayed in their calendar. > > > > So then the users DOES want to be part of the appointment. > Yes, but the user DOESN'T want that to be communicated back to the originator. Often it is purely because the originator never bothered to untick the "Request Response" box. There is no option within Evolution to not send the response - nor any indication that a response will be sent. It's all done silently.
I'm sure the more corporate orientated would say "so what, what's wrong with that". But it's not for us to second guess why someone may or may not want a response sent, it is sufficient that they don't, but they have no control over it. There is a complication in that the RSVPs are sent by the calendar server (I think, from my limited testing), not Evolution - but the fact is that to the user they interact with Evolution so it is Evolution's responsibility to take account of what the user wants. In this case it would require re-writing the iCal meeting invite to remove the RSVP request rather than just passing it blindly to the calendar server. P. _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list