Mail App For Mac That Doesnt Suck

Currently iOS doesn’t give any other email app the power to be the default client of choice like you can in OS X. That means that if I want to share an article from Reeder, or any other app that has support to share via mail, I’m forced back into Mail.app.That isn’t to say action and share sheet extensions haven’t made this somewhat more manageable in the past few years, but all.

Managing your inbox can be a daunting task these days. From those important emails you must see to those that just get in the way, it can be tedious to organize it all to see what you want to see.

If you use the Mail app on your Mac, you can set up email rules that help you manage it all. Direct emails as they arrive, mark them so they’re easier to spot, and clean up your inbox easily, here’s how.

Access the Mail app Rules

With your Mail app open, follow these steps to access the Rules area.

1) Click Mail from the menu and select Preferences.

2) In the window that pops open, click Rules.

3) Any rules you have set up will be displayed. To create a new one, click Add Rule.

Create a Mail Rule

After you click Add Rule, a box will appear with various options for the type of Rule you want to create. Start by describing your Rule or simply giving it a name that makes sense to you. Then, go on to set it up.

Set up the conditions

The next section is where you set up the conditions for the incoming email. After the word If, select either Any or All from the dropdown box. Ask yourself, do you want any condition you enter to be met or all of them?

After that, you set up the conditions to meet and you have many options to choose from. The first box is for those emails coming in and how to identify them. So, select from choices like:

  • Who the email comes from, who is copied, or what’s in the subject line
  • The date sent or received
  • If the sender is in your contacts or not, is a VIP, or is a member of a group
  • If the email priority is high, normal, or low
  • The email contains a certain type of attachment
Salon

Depending on the option you select, you will see different options. For example, Sender is in my contacts, Priority, or Message is junk mail do not offer any further conditions to set up. But, others ask for additional conditions. For instance, Attachment type asks you to pick from a list and date sent or received prompts you for the email age.

You may need decide what the message should contain, not contain, begins with, ends with, or is equal to. Follow that by entering text into the third box. So, you could enter something like “From contains the word Apple” or “Subject contains the word Sale”.

Set up the actions

After you have set up the conditions for the incoming email, you decide what actions should be taken. Choose from options like:

  • Move the message to another mailbox or folder
  • Set the color of the message
  • Automatically reply to or forward the message
  • Delete the message
  • Mark the message as read

Just like with the conditions you set up, the actions may ask for more details. If you pick Move Message, you must choose the mailbox and folder. Or, if you select Set Color of Message, you need to pick the color and whether it should apply to the background or text.

Once you have your description, conditions, and actions set, click OK and your new rule is ready to go. You will then see it in your list of Rules in the Preferences box.

If you ever want to change a rule, select it and click Edit. You can also click Duplicate to copy a rule and then make slight changes or Remove a rule you no longer need.

Example Rules

Not sure how these Rules can help you? Here are a few examples.

  • Move messages from your boss to your work folder.
  • Receive notifications when you get messages from your mom.
  • Automatically flag and reply to messages marked as high priority.
  • Automatically delete messages with certain words in the subject.
  • Play a sound when emails containing media attachments arrive.

As you can see, Rules can not only help you organize your inbox by moving or deleting messages, but also receive notifications for important ones or automatically flag messages making them easier to spot.

Plus, you can set up more than one set of conditions and actions for a message using the plus signs in those sections to add more.

Mail Rules rule!

It doesn’t take long to set up Rules in the Mail app and once you do, you can use them to organize your inbox without lifting another finger. Are you ready to start setting up some rules? Let us know which ones you create that help you the most.

And, take a look at how to filter emails on your iPhone and iPad or how to work with email rules in Gmail.

Active2 years, 7 months ago

Aol Mail App For Mac Desktop

I have minimised a mail viewer window to the dock. When I click the Mail icon (to the left of the dividing line) it does not bring the viewer window up. I have to click on the actual viewer window (to the right of the line) to see the window and mail messages. This is new, reverts to normal if I close mail and restart, but soon reverts. Any suggestions please?

techraf
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michaelpaulmichaelpaul

1 Answer

I had this problem but it went away when I removed mail from the dock and then docked it again.

Mail App For Mac That Doesn't Sucker Punch

Right click icon, select options, uncheck 'Keep in Dock'

Right click icon, select quit

Then start mail from Finder>Applications and recheck 'Keep in Dock' from the icon that reappears in the dock

Mail App For Mac

GeoffreyGeoffrey

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Mail App For Mac That Doesn't Sucker

protected by CommunityOct 31 '16 at 18:16

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