I figured it out. The problem actually had nothing to with Emacs. It seems as though w3m on Arch Linux is broken. Recompiling it myself fixed it.
Regards, Elias On 19 April 2014 01:00, Sharon Kimble <[email protected]> wrote: > Elias Mårtenson <[email protected]> writes: > > > I'm using Gnus as shipped with Emacs (fresh off of the source > > repository). > > > > Am I the only one having problems with non-ASCII characters in HTML > > mail (mostly posted from Outlook) buffers? Instead of shopwing the > > correct chinese (or whatever) characters they all come out as > > sequences of control characters (^A^B^D^E etc...) > > > > This does not necessarily have anything to do with Gnus, or even > > Emacs. I'm constantly recompiling Emacs and I'm using Arch Linux so > > I'm also constantly updating the operating system. Any suggestions as > > to where I should start looking would be appreciated. > > > > Regards, > > Elias > > I've found the same problem too, but no solution. I come across it when > pasting text from a web posting into emacs. > > However, I have a script called 'ebuild' on my blog site which you might > find > useful for updating and rebuilding emacs. Its all automatic until it wants > to > install in '/usr/local/bin' when it just wants your password to install it. > > Sharon. > -- > A taste of linux = http://www.sharons.org.uk > my git repo = https://bitbucket.org/boudiccas/dots > TGmeds = http://www.tgmeds.org.uk > Debian testing, Fluxbox 1.3.5, emacs 24.4.50.6 > > _______________________________________________ > info-gnus-english mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english > >
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