On Tue, 26 Sep 2000, Tom Rawson wrote: >On 26 Sep 00, Dennis Budd wrote: > >> Just to be clear here, you mean using Pegasus's "forward without >> change" (I forget exactly what it's called in Pegasus, but it does the >> same thing as a "bounce"), and not Pegasus's normal forwarding >> function, which allows you to edit the forwarded message but also >> includes it in your own mail envelope. > >If you forward from the folder window with the message selected, or in the >message reader and leave "edit before forwarding" unchecked, Pegasus will >use Resent- headers, and will not allow editing. That's what I meant. It's been a year or two since I've used Pegasus, and I no longer have it available to call up for reference. I had to rely on imperfect memory. >If you forward in the >message reader and check "edit before forwarding" then you get a new >envelope, and can edit the message. > >Since I filter most incoming mail into folders, editing the original >message is tough. To do the kind of editing described here I would >forward using the first method, then edit the output file (.PMX I think) >before sending -- assuming "send immediately" is turned off. That's how I'd do it if I didn't have shell access to a Unix account. This is the only way I've seen that will work with a Wintel PC mail client, unless a similar kludge is available with Eudora, which also will not let you edit a "bounced" message. Fortunately, I don't need to do this very often. Dennis