On Mon, Nov 30, 2015 at 5:38 PM, Henri Sivonen wrote:
> Japanese *email* is often encoded as ISO-2022-JP, and Web browsers
> also support ISO-2022-JP even though Shift_JIS and EUC-JP are the more
> common Japanese legacy encodings on the *Web*. The two UTF-16 variants
> and ISO-2022-JP are the onl
On Mon, Nov 30, 2015 at 7:09 PM, Jörg Knobloch wrote:
> As far as I see, there are no objections to removing the ISO-2022-JP-2
> variant as long as the ISO-2022-JP is maintained.
Cool. This intent is indeed scoped to the -2 stuff only.
On Mon, Nov 30, 2015 at 7:21 PM, Jonas Sicking wrote:
> On
On 11/30/2015 1:02 PM, Andrew Sutherland wrote:
On Mon, Nov 30, 2015, at 01:24 PM, Adam Roach wrote:
Does this mean it might interact with webmail services as well? Or do
they tend to do server-side transcoding from the received encoding to
something like UTF8?
They do server-side decoding. It
On Mon, Nov 30, 2015, at 01:24 PM, Adam Roach wrote:
> Does this mean it might interact with webmail services as well? Or do
> they tend to do server-side transcoding from the received encoding to
> something like UTF8?
They do server-side decoding. It would take a tremendous amount of
effort t
On 11/30/15 09:38, Henri Sivonen wrote:
The only known realistic source of ISO-2022-JP-2 data is Apple's Mail
application under some circumstances, which may impact Thunderbird and
SeaMonkey.
Does this mean it might interact with webmail services as well? Or do
they tend to do server-side tran
On Mon, Nov 30, 2015 at 7:38 AM, Henri Sivonen wrote:
> Other browsers don't support this extension, so it clearly can't be a
> requirement for the Web Platform
Generally speaking, I don't think this reasoning is entirely accurate.
We know that there's lots of browser-specific code paths out ther
On 30/11/2015 16:38, Henri Sivonen wrote:
Are there any objections to removing the ISO-2022-JP-2 functionality
from mozilla-central?
Hello,
I am currently in the process of repairing long-standing issues with CJK
e-mail in general and Japanese e-mail using ISO-2022-JP in particularm
see belo
Japanese *email* is often encoded as ISO-2022-JP, and Web browsers
also support ISO-2022-JP even though Shift_JIS and EUC-JP are the more
common Japanese legacy encodings on the *Web*. The two UTF-16 variants
and ISO-2022-JP are the only remaining encodings in the Web Platform
that encode non-Basic
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