On Fri, 27 Jun 2003 13:32:52 +1000 (E. Australia Standard Time) Mark Livingstone 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> <Sigh> What do you guys use for a wrapping setting? I think I'm at
> about 70 or so.

You won't solve your wrapping problem by increasing your wrap
position... The problem is that you need to use an editor that knows how
to wrap quoted parts of a message.

Here is what was in your message (a quote from Vadim):

> > Yes and no. In general, bugs should, of course, be fixed before
> > adding new
> > features but as the example of a composer shows, sometimes it is
> > easier and
> > better to add a new feature (new composer) than fix the bugs in the
> > old
> > code.

If my cursor lies on any line of this paragraph, hitting Ctrl-q gives
me:

> > Yes and no. In general, bugs should, of course, be fixed before
> > adding new features but as the example of a composer shows,
> > sometimes it is easier and better to add a new feature (new
> > composer) than fix the bugs in the old code.

And if you have this text (note the different quote levels), 

> > Yes and no. In general, bugs should, of course, be fixed before
> > adding new
> > features but as the example of a composer shows, sometimes it is
> > easier and
> > better to add a new feature (new composer) than fix the bugs in the
> > old
> > code.
>
> Yes and no. In general, bugs should, of course, be fixed before
> adding new
> features but as the example of a composer shows, sometimes it is
> easier and
> better to add a new feature (new composer) than fix the bugs in the
> old
> code.

Ctrl-Q anywhere in it will give

> > Yes and no. In general, bugs should, of course, be fixed before
> > adding new features but as the example of a composer shows,
> > sometimes it is easier and better to add a new feature (new
> > composer) than fix the bugs in the old code.
>
> Yes and no. In general, bugs should, of course, be fixed before adding
> new features but as the example of a composer shows, sometimes it is
> easier and better to add a new feature (new composer) than fix the
> bugs in the old code.

Isn't that nice? The secret is gVim[1], plus Cream[2]. And that's why it
will be hard to come up with a good composer... :(

[1] <http://www.vim.org>
[2] <http://cream.sourceforge.net/>

-- 
Xavier Nodet
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin, 1759.


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