Ian, AFAIK it should be handled correctly by MimeMessage, if you're having specific problems what are they? FWIW I've noticed problems with Europeans (self included) using US_ASCII charset, the answer is to use utf-8. I use quoted printable meself, and this mail comes to you from Europe via James...
FYI there were problems in the past related to James having a non-English "locale" and trying to process data from a different locale, this was related to dates which are always in English (James was translating them), but I could easily see how a similar locale difference would affect charset, though not transfer encoding which is by definition meant to solve many of the problems of messages being altered en-route. d. > -----Original Message----- > From: Ian Huynh [mailto:ianh@;hubspan.com] > Sent: 23 October 2002 19:09 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable, James 2.0a3 > Importance: High > > > I am receiving email (with MIME attachment) from a user in Europe > which uses > Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable. > > Shouldn't James handle this encoding automatically prior to > passing it on to > our mailet? or should we handle this inside our mailet? > > Thanks > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: > <mailto:james-user-unsubscribe@;jakarta.apache.org> > For additional commands, e-mail: > <mailto:james-user-help@;jakarta.apache.org> > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:james-user-unsubscribe@;jakarta.apache.org> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:james-user-help@;jakarta.apache.org>
