Evolution Contacts: the Address Book
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Novell Confidential
Manual (ENU) 21 December 2004
also interacts with the File Under box to help you organize your contacts and to handle multi-word
surnames.To see how it works, type a name in the Full Name field. As an example, we’ll use
Miguel de Icaza. You’ll notice that the File Under field also fills in, but in reverse: Icaza, Miguel
de. If you had entered John Q. Doe, the contacts editor would have correctly guessed that the entry
should be filed under “Doe, John Q.” However, Miguel’s surname, “de Icaza”, has two words, and
to sort it correctly you must enter de Icaza, Miguel in the File As entry.
Where:
Select one of your address books as the location for this contact. You might not be able to
write to all available address books, especially those on a network.
Categories:
Click the Categories button to select categories for this card. If you assign contact
categories, you can then search for contacts using those categories. For more information on
contact categories, see
“Organizing your Contacts” on page 61
.
Free/Busy and Calendar URLs:
Click the Personal Information tab to enter Web addresses for
the contact. If the contact publishes Free/Busy or calendar data online, using a server other than
Exchange or GroupWise, you can specify the addresses for those servers here. After you do so,
you can check their schedules when creating appointments in the calendar.
Searching for Contacts
1
Select your search type in the search bar.
2
Specify your query.
3
Press Enter to begin the search.
For a more complex search, select Search Advanced and select criteria that describe your desired
contact:
1
Name the rule in the Rule Name field.
2
Set up your criteria in the If field.
3
Click Add Criterion to add additional criteria.
4
Click Search.
To show all your contacts, Click Clear in the search bar, press Shift+Ctrl+B, or search with an
empty query.
Organizing your Contacts
Just as you can search mail, you can search contacts. You can also create several individual address
books, or contact groups. Within a given contact group, you can have several categories of
contacts.
“Contacts Groups” on page 62
“Creating a List of Contacts” on page 62
“Grouping with Categories” on page 63
“Selecting Your Default Contact List” on page 63
“Configuring Evolution to use LDAP” on page 64
Summary of Contents for EVOLUTION 2.6
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