155. Find a Message
154 Get Your Email It won't take too long before you receive so many email messages that you'll find it difficult to just scroll through and locate the one message you want to read right now. Luckily, Thunderbird makes it easy for you to locate a specific message by searching through the message headers, the sender information, the subject line, and even the message text itself.
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1. | Choose Area to Search The portion of each message that will be searched appears in faint text within the Search box on the Search bar. For example, it might be set to Subject or Sender , which searches the subject line and the sender field of each message in the current folder. You can search a different message area instead by clicking the Magnifying Glass button in front of the Search box and selecting the area to search.After you select an area to search such as Entire Message , that area will be used for subsequent searches until you change the selection again. |
2. | Type Search Text Click in the Search box and type the text or phrase you want to search for. Messages matching your search criteria appear in the listing.154 Get Your Email , how to label messages and then display only messages with a particular label. Open the View list on the Search bar and select the view you want.In addition to displaying only messages with a particular label such as Important , you can use the View list to display only mail you haven't read yet, recent mail (from the last two days), mail from the last five days, mail from people in your Contacts list, email with attached files, and email that's not identified as junk. If you choose Customize from the View list, you can set up your own criteria and create a custom viewfor example, a view that shows only messages from your family or messages that are replies to messages you've sent. |