Creating a filter that excludes specific nodes relative to the filtering path.
Thursday, 13 March 2014
Gmail - hidden ways to filter out emails
http://gmailblog.blogspot.com.au/2008/03/2-hidden-ways-to-get-more-from-your.html
Posted by Robby Stein, Associate Product Marketing Manager
I recently discovered some little-known ways to use your Gmail address that can give you greater control over your inbox and save you some time and headache. When you choose a Gmail address, you actually get more than just "yourusername@gmail.com." Here are two different ways you can modify your Gmail address and still get your mail:
For me, the real value in being able to manipulate your email address is that it makes it really easy to filter on those variants. For example you could use hikingfan+bank@gmail.com when you sign up for online banking and then set up a filter to automatically star, archive or label emails addressed to hikingfan+bank. You can also use this when you register for a service and think they might share your information. For example, I added "+donation" when I gave money to a political organization once, and now when I see emails from other groups to that address, I know how they got it. Solution: filtered to auto-delete.
Posted by Robby Stein, Associate Product Marketing Manager
I recently discovered some little-known ways to use your Gmail address that can give you greater control over your inbox and save you some time and headache. When you choose a Gmail address, you actually get more than just "yourusername@gmail.com." Here are two different ways you can modify your Gmail address and still get your mail:
- Append a plus ("+") sign and any combination of words or numbers after your email address. For example, if your name was hikingfan@gmail.com, you could send mail to hikingfan+friends@gmail.com or hikingfan+mailinglists@gmail.com.
- Insert one or several dots (".") anywhere in your email address. Gmail doesn't recognize periods as characters in addresses -- we just ignore them. For example, you could tell people your address was hikingfan@gmail.com, hiking.fan@gmail.com or hi.kin.g.fan@gmail.com. (We understand that there has been some confusion about this in the past, but to settle it once and for all, you can indeed receive mail at all the variations with dots.)
For me, the real value in being able to manipulate your email address is that it makes it really easy to filter on those variants. For example you could use hikingfan+bank@gmail.com when you sign up for online banking and then set up a filter to automatically star, archive or label emails addressed to hikingfan+bank. You can also use this when you register for a service and think they might share your information. For example, I added "+donation" when I gave money to a political organization once, and now when I see emails from other groups to that address, I know how they got it. Solution: filtered to auto-delete.
Tuesday, 11 March 2014
Adobe CQ/AEM - CQ dependencies POM
Here is an example of setting up the pom file for CQ dependencies:
http://dev.cqblueprints.com/nexus/content/repositories/releases/com/cqblueprints/cqdependencies/5.6.0/cqdependencies-5.6.0.pom
Obviously you wouldn't include everything in that file - just the ones needed for the project. I believe the order of dependencies matters too.
http://dev.cqblueprints.com/nexus/content/repositories/releases/com/cqblueprints/cqdependencies/5.6.0/cqdependencies-5.6.0.pom
Obviously you wouldn't include everything in that file - just the ones needed for the project. I believe the order of dependencies matters too.
Wednesday, 5 March 2014
Adobe CQ/AEM - Logging configuration
Here is an example for adding a configuration to log CQ query information:
- Open http://localhost:4502/system/console/configMgr and scoll down to "Apache Sling Logging Logger Configuration" and click on it.
- In the dialog set the following
- Log Level to 'Debug'
- Log File to 'logs/query.log'
- Logger to 'org.apache.jackrabbit.core.query.QueryImpl'
- Click on save.
There should be a new entry created under Apache Sling Logging Logger Configuration
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