On 13/05/2010 15:14, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 2010-05-13 5:02 AM, William Blunn wrote:
So if I had a folder "foo" and deleted it, I end up with a folder "Trash/foo" (which Thunderbird calls "Deleted/foo").
We have been using Thunderbird exclusively since before it reached version 1.0, and it has never, to the best of my recollection, used anything but 'Trash' for the trash can.
Thank-you for your message.
I suspect it may be that Thunderbird substitutes a localised translation on-the-fly for display purposes.
I am using the British localised version of Thunderbird.
So the IMAP folder is called "Trash" but Thunderbird shows the translation "Deleted" for me.
Fair enough: Thunderbird is doing a trash can model on folders.
No idea what you mean by that...
It means that Thunderbird does not delete folders when requested to but instead moves them to a "trash can". The folders are actually deleted with the "trash can" is emptied. I call this the "trash can model". Another model would be the "do it straightaway model", in which when I ask the program to delete a folder, it deletes it straight away.
Regards,
Bill