On Wednesday 16 July 2014 17:39:55 Kevin Krammer wrote: > On Wednesday, 2014-07-16, 15:10:48, David Goodenough wrote: > > On Wednesday 16 July 2014 05:43:10 O.Sinclair wrote: > > > make sure you have hidden files visible - the subdirectories are now > > > hidden > > > mine are in /home/myuser/.local/share/.local-mail- > > > directory/.whatevermailfolder (notice the dot in the beginning) and some > > > of > > > them are hidden folders, some not > > > > I have never quite understood why some files and directories inside .local > > are hidden. You only go into .local when you need to find some mail > > manually, and having them hidden just seems to be done to make life > > difficult for the user! > > It is not hidden, the hiding is a result of convention used by Filemanager > and file managment tools when dealing with directory entries beginning with > a period. > > The structure, i.e. using a subdirectory starting with a period to indicate > a sub folder, is a widely used one when it comes to Maildir storage. > Another very common implementation of that is Maildir++ > > It is a form of disambiguation, e.g. protecting against a user creating a > folder with names "new", "tmp" or "cur", which have special meanings in > Maildir. > > Cheers, > Kevin Kevin, I understand that, but I think there is a little more to it that that. Tools like grep ... * do not search them (yes I know I can use grep ... .* but I have to do that as well. Most of the time I need to access these files to find things, rather than to mess around with directory structures. My problem is not I realise with KDE, but is with the whole mail community. Its not a show stopper, just an nuisance which I could live without. David ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.