Re: Anyone with a solution for this?

This WebDNA talk-list message is from

2001


It keeps the original formatting.
numero = 38907
interpreted = N
texte = All returned emails that I've seen have in the body, the headers of the original email.- highlight all of the emails, and do a file, save as (if this is too big, you may need to do them in batches).- you then need to get all the lines that have the 'To:' header alone. Either by removing all lines except those that have the original 'To:' or by extracting the lines with the 'To:' from the file and into another file. ie., To: I would do this using vi, and regular expression searches, or you could use the grep command, you could even use the sort command. I sure there are lots of ways depending what editor you are using.- once you have the file that only contains lines that are the To header, you will need to get rid of the header that is yours. When you saved the emails off as text files, it also included the headers for the returned email.- once you only the original To headers, you can then do a search for To: <' and replace with '', and search for '>' and replace with nothing. This will leave you with a file listing out the 'bad' emails.jennifer ------------------------------------------ Jennifer Johnson DeWolf Ansibility, Inc. AOL IM: Gammantria jennifer@ansibility.com w:919.834.8265 f:919.834.8568 -----Original Message----- From: WebCatalog Talk [mailto:WebDNA-Talk@talk.smithmicro.com]On Behalf Of Will Starck Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2001 3:38 PM To: WebCatalog Talk Subject: Anyone with a solution for this? I've got 350 'returned as undeliverable' emails sitting in an Outlook Express (Windows 2000) mailbox. Anyone with any ideas on how to extract the email addresses so we can remove them from our database?TIA,Will Starck NovaDerm skin care science http://www.novaderm.com support@novaderm.com 800-378-1740 ------------------------------------------------------------- This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list . To unsubscribe, E-mail to: To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to Web Archive of this list is at: http://search.smithmicro.com/------------------------------------------------------------- This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list . To unsubscribe, E-mail to: To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to Web Archive of this list is at: http://search.smithmicro.com/ Associated Messages, from the most recent to the oldest:

    
  1. Re: Anyone with a solution for this? (Bob Minor 2001)
  2. Re: Anyone with a solution for this? (Glenn Busbin 2001)
  3. Re: Anyone with a solution for this? (John Peacock 2001)
  4. Re: Anyone with a solution for this? (Dale LaFountain 2001)
  5. Re: Anyone with a solution for this? (Samuel Renkert 2001)
  6. Re: Anyone with a solution for this? (Jennifer Johnson DeWolf 2001)
  7. Anyone with a solution for this? (Will Starck 2001)
All returned emails that I've seen have in the body, the headers of the original email.- highlight all of the emails, and do a file, save as (if this is too big, you may need to do them in batches).- you then need to get all the lines that have the 'To:' header alone. Either by removing all lines except those that have the original 'To:' or by extracting the lines with the 'To:' from the file and into another file. ie., To: I would do this using vi, and regular expression searches, or you could use the grep command, you could even use the sort command. I sure there are lots of ways depending what editor you are using.- once you have the file that only contains lines that are the To header, you will need to get rid of the header that is yours. When you saved the emails off as text files, it also included the headers for the returned email.- once you only the original To headers, you can then do a search for To: <' and replace with '', and search for '>' and replace with nothing. This will leave you with a file listing out the 'bad' emails.jennifer ------------------------------------------ Jennifer Johnson DeWolf Ansibility, Inc. AOL IM: Gammantria jennifer@ansibility.com w:919.834.8265 f:919.834.8568 -----Original Message----- From: WebCatalog Talk [mailto:WebDNA-Talk@talk.smithmicro.com]On Behalf Of Will Starck Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2001 3:38 PM To: WebCatalog Talk Subject: Anyone with a solution for this? I've got 350 'returned as undeliverable' emails sitting in an Outlook Express (Windows 2000) mailbox. Anyone with any ideas on how to extract the email addresses so we can remove them from our database?TIA,Will Starck NovaDerm skin care science http://www.novaderm.com support@novaderm.com 800-378-1740 ------------------------------------------------------------- This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list . To unsubscribe, E-mail to: To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to Web Archive of this list is at: http://search.smithmicro.com/------------------------------------------------------------- This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list . To unsubscribe, E-mail to: To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to Web Archive of this list is at: http://search.smithmicro.com/ Jennifer Johnson DeWolf

DOWNLOAD WEBDNA NOW!

Top Articles:

Talk List

The WebDNA community talk-list is the best place to get some help: several hundred extremely proficient programmers with an excellent knowledge of WebDNA and an excellent spirit will deliver all the tips and tricks you can imagine...

Related Readings:

Robert Minor duplicate mail (1997) TCP Connect/send and CGI (2003) Emailer errors & disappearing messages (1998) This message couldn't reach the list! (multi-column (1998) When is unitShipCost calculated? (1998) 'does not contain' operator needed ... (1997) Customizing WebDelivery.html (1998) Almost a there but..bye bye NetCloak (1997) RE: Template Not Found (1998) Using Cookie for client specific info? (1997) Credit Card Number checking (1997) WebCat2b13 Mac plugin - [sendmail] and checkboxes (1997) Plugin or CGI or both (1997) Keyword search (2004) Help name our technology! I found it (1997) WebCat2.0 [format thousands .0f] no go (1997) Newbie from and old bee (1997) Database Upload (2000) Help with database strategy (1998) creator code (1997)