All this information on text wrapping is very interesting. But, what does it have to do with my original post?
I will repeat in a much more succinct way: "Would it be reasonable and would PDI be willing to put a full text search capability on the archive web page?" It is both frustrating and time consuming to read all the "stuff" being written on this list as it is. Then when one posts with a very specific subject title expecting the responses to be relative to that subject and finds after two days of reading those responses that they are not, it becomes even more frustrating! Rich Irwin [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Sabahattin Gucukoglu Sent: Friday, August 06, 2004 10:03 AM To: Braillenote List Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Full Text Search Archive Hi, On 6 Aug 2004 at 10:27, Weinger, Jerrold (DSCP) spoke, thus: > I am a bit puzzled. None of the Braillenote List e-mails in my mailbox > fits this description. Indeed, all of these e-mails are formatted. I use > the Braillenote BT 32 having Keysoft Version 5.1 Build 22. I Also use > Microsoft Outlook at one location, and Microsoft Outlook Express at another > location. Using Microsoft Outlook, a test print of a randomly selected > e-mail from this list prints perfectly on a laser printer. First of all, all three email clients in common share the characteristic that paragraphs are, internally, reformatted as lines with soft linebreaks inserted automatically at your selected margin. Therefore, unless corruption occurs before you retrieve the mail message, as at your transport or that of another network which relayed the list mail to you, you will appear to have no difficulties reading email produced by the BrailleNote on any Windows-based and non-compliant client. Windows has always used paragraph format for its text files - this is true even for Notepad and Wordpad, if you don't force a new line, there is no new line. It was true for Outlook Express for some time, but it isn't anymore. Printing, likewise, is likely to appear correct because of your mailer or word processor's automatic wrapping features. However, these are soft breaks, not hard breaks. Look at the message with your BrailleNote in editing mode, or cursor through. Note the "New line" (CR/LF) appears only at the end of each paragraph, the lines separating the paragraph are divided by "Line breaks". If you were to take that flat file and display it on an 80-by-25 terminal with no wrapping capability, the mail would look attrocious. Last but not least, the randomly-selected email you printed may not have been generated by a BrailleNote. The problem I have lies at my transport, which correctly limits the line length of the email. In doing so, it introduces CR/LF pairs, which my mailer, which by default doesn't wrap but which I've chosen to make wrap and guess at where lines should really be ending, will simply substitute newlines with spaces (correctly since the newlines shouldn't be occurring there), separating the words where splits occur. Ann is less fortunate, and her mailer doesn't wrap at all unless told to, resulting in almost complete illegibility. From the viewpoint of standards, though, this is the absolute correct thing to do, since all mail should fit into a terminal display when written correctly. > Would you send me, off list, an example of what you are describing? If you would like, sure - when I next stumble across such a message, I will forward it on as an attachment to those who want a goosy at it. Would anyone else like to see what their mail to me looks like? In case the description is sufficient - simply take the text file resulting from saving a message written by a BrailleNote user, count to the 998th character along a given line, so long as a newline isn't encountered, and hit newline (enter) there, regardless of where it is (including mid-word). That is how is available via POP3. If you have GNU fmt or Pegasus Mail or another intelligent formatter, process the file so that line lengths are estimated. You have there a reasonable simulation of what I see. Cheers, Sabahattin -- Thought for the day: Bagpipes (n): an octopus wearing a kilt. Sabahattin Gucukoglu Phone: +44 20 7,502-1615 Mobile: +44 7986 053399 http://www.sabahattin-gucukoglu.com/ Email/MSN: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ___ To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit http://list.pulsedata.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote
