The feature I miss most in eM compared to Apple Mail is the ability to move the current message to the “most likely” folder.
In Apple Mail, when I select a message in my inbox, there is a button that appears at the top “Move to Folder NNN”, where NNN is the folder to which I have moved similar emails in the past. This NNN folder is computed automatically by the app, depending on the message thread and recipients. This way, I can read the message, potentially reply to it, and then with one click, move it to its project folder.
I know that in eM there is the possibility to move the message to a folder, but I then have to select the folder by hand (or drag and drop the message in the folder). Or I can create shortcuts, but I have to create all these shortcuts by hand, and one per project. This takes many clicks ad navigation.
It must be fun to implement the algorithm to detect the “most likely” folder.
And it is a useful feature, I think.
QuickMove helps a bit, but I have a similar workflow to “AntoineSchmitt,” which is why I’m currently switching back and forth between Apple Mail and eM Client. eM Client’s approach actually works quite well: I right-click on the email list and then move the mouse down to “Move to Folder,” where the recently used folders are displayed. However, the context menu is very long and the command is located right in the middle. It would already help if the command were at the top – that way I could access it more quickly and reliably. The alternative would be a keyboard shortcut that directly opens this selection with the recent folders.
However, the context menu is very long and the command is located right in the middle. It would already help if the command were at the top – that way I could access it more quickly and reliably.
You can also eg: “right click on the toolbar along the top” and customise it to add the “Move to Folder” button for recent folders wherever you like as per the below V10 example screenshot.
Or you can “click on the move to folder button” to bring up the move to folder browser window.