Hello Walter,

I am going to paste in a Mac World article, the link to which is located at the 
end of the text, that should shed some light on this, for you.

Mark

Five iCloud email tricks you probably missed

If you have an Apple ID, then you have an iCloud email account. This free 
account gives you up to 5GB storage for your emails, minus what you use for 
documents and other data you store in the cloud. It’s easy to work with your 
iCloud email from Apple’s Mail, on the Mac, or on an iOS device. Still, you may 
not know about the many extra options and features available if you log into 
iCloud on the Web. 

Before you can take advantage of any of the following tips, you need to turn on 
iCloud. If you already have an Apple ID, which you use on the iTunes store, you 
may never have set up iCloud. Read this article to get it up and running. Once 
you've done that, you can use your email account and these five tricks. 

1.
Access email anywhere 
While you may check your email on your Mac, iPhone or iPad, you can also access 
your messages on the Web. This is useful if you need to get or send email from 
a shared computer, but also if you need to send or receive files when you’re on 
the road. Just log into icloud.com, and click the Mail icon. You’ll have access 
to all of your email—and all of your contacts, if you’ve set iCloud to sync 
them—so you can send and receive messages and files. This can be useful if you 
need to get a file and print it out when you’re visiting a client or friend. 

2.
Create rules that work on all your devices
You can set up rules—filters that act on incoming email messages—using Mail for 
OS X. (See this article for tips on using rules.) But these rules only work on 
your Mac; they don’t have any effect on your iPhone or iPad, unless you leave 
your Mac on all the time. If your Mac’s not running, your email will simply 
flow into your iCloud account’s inbox. 

But you can set up rules on the icloud.com website that will move messages 
before they get to any of your devices. For example, you can filter your email 
so all the messages from your employer go into a specific mailbox. 

To do this, you need to create a new mailbox; you can do this on your Mac or 
iOS device, but with iCloud on the Web, just click the plus-sign (+) icon next 
to Folders, then type a name for the new mailbox. 

Next, click the gear icon at the top-right of the iCloud Mail interface, and 
choose Rules. Click Add a Rule, then choose one of the first conditions: if a 
message is from a specific person, has a subject containing a specific word, 
and so on. In the next field, enter an email address (for a specific person), a 
domain name, such as macworld.com (this will filter any messages from that 
domain), one or more words for subject filtering, and so on. 

In the next section, choose either Move to Folder, Move to Trash, or Forward 
to. Then select the folder to move the message to, or the email address to 
forward it to. Click Done, and the rule will become active. 

You can create rules so the iCloud sever will act on your email before it gets 
to your Mac or your iOS device.

Now, any messages meeting these conditions will be filtered on the iCloud 
server, and you won’t need to leave your Mac on to do the job. 

3.
Let everyone know you're away
Here’s something you can’t do in Mail on the Mac, or on iOS. If you’re away 
from work, or on vacation, you may want to set up an auto-response to tell 
people when you’ll be back. Click the gear icon at the top-right of the iCloud 
Mail page, then click Preferences. Click the Vacation icon, and check 
Automatically reply to messages when they are received. Enter the text you’d 
like sent, and then click Done. 

Set up an auto-response when you're away or on vacation.

You can combine this with Rules to route work messages to colleagues, too. 
After you’ve set up the auto-response, click Rules, and create a rule for 
specific addresses or domains, and forward them to the person at work who’s 
filling in for you while you’re away. When you get back from your trip, just 
delete the rule. 

4.
Forward emails to another account
You probably don’t have just an iCloud account; you may have another account 
for work as well. If you get some emails in your iCloud account, you can choose 
to forward them all to another account. This is a good way to use your iCloud 
account for some of your email, and download it when you check your main email 
account. Instead of checking two accounts, you can just check one. 

Click the gear icon at the top-right of the iCloud Mail page, click 
Preferences, and then click General. Next to Forwarding, check Forward my email 
to, and enter an email address, such as your other account. You can also check 
Delete messages after forwarding, if you don’t want them clogging up your 
iCloud mailbox. 

5.
Avoid spam with iCloud aliases
Set up email aliases to protect your main address from spam. Use an alias to 
sign up for online newsletters, for example, or to post on message boards.
While you only have one iCloud email account, you can set up aliases or other 
addresses that you can use to send and receive emails with that account. In the 
iCloud email preferences, click Accounts, then, below the account list, click 
Add an alias. You can choose up to three aliases, and you may want to create 
one to use for online shopping sites, and another for friends, so you only use 
your main account for work. To avoid getting spam to your main address, use an 
alias when you have to give an email address to register. 

The Create Mail Alias dialog box lets you choose an alias and apply a label to 
it. If the alias you want is taken, you’ll be told that it’s not available. 
Click OK to save the alias; you can then use it to send or receive email. 

With these tips, you can take advantage of some great features available with 
your iCloud email account. While you’re at it, you can also check out our 
article …

Original article at:
http://www.macworld.com/article/2046147/five-icloud-email-tricks-you-probably-missed.html

-----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com [mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] 
On Behalf Of Walter Harper
Sent: Saturday, July 16, 2016 3:52 AM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: setting up rules in the mail app

Hello all,
How do you setup messages rules in the mail app on mac mail?
Walter 

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