Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII, sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit ! My mails sources : Sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit, Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII...

2004-09-30 Thread WilWilWil
Io,

When I look at the source of my sent mails, sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they 
are 7 bit !

Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII ?

Can you explain me the role of these properties ?

Why such changes without any changes from me in account parameters ?

Thanks

-- 
WilWilWil (France)


TB 3.0
Windows XP
Service Pack 1

Current version is 3.00.00 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
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Re: Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII, sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit ! My mails sources : Sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit, Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII...

2004-09-30 Thread Feli Wilcke
Hello WilWilWil,

On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 13:16:28 +0200GMT WilWilWil wrote:

 When I look at the source of my sent mails, sometimes they are 8 bit,
 sometimes they are 7 bit ! Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes
 they are US quote printable ASCII ?

when you do not have accented characters in your mail, TB will use
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii and
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit because your mail can be displayed
with these settings. If you use accented characters like é or â TB will
use the character set you defined in your settings.

-- 
Regards,
Feli

The Bat! 3.0.1 RC1 on Windows 2000 5.0 2195 Service Pack 4
BayesIt! 0.6.10



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Re: Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII, sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit ! My mails sources : Sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit, Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII...

2004-09-30 Thread Thorvald Neumann
Hæ!

Thursday, September 30, 2004, 13:57, Feli Wilcke wrote:
 when you do not have accented characters in your mail, TB will use
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii and
 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit because your mail can be displayed
 with these settings. If you use accented characters like é or â TB will
 use the character set you defined in your settings.

You can override this with a small macro in your templates:

%CHARSET=characterset

-- 
Kveðja!
Thorvald Neumann | http://www.aesir.de/
---
The Bat! v3.0.1 RC1
PopFile v0.22.0
Windows 2000 SP4 (v5.0.2195)
---
   
 





Current version is 3.00.00 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
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Re: Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII, sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit ! My mails sources : Sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit, Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII...

2004-09-30 Thread Ludovic LE MOAL
Hi,

On Thursday, September 30, 2004 at 1:16:28 PM, WilWilWil wrote:

 When I look at the source of my sent mails, sometimes they are 8
 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit !

 Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable
 ASCII ?

 Why such changes without any changes from me in account parameters ?

When you're writing a message, if in this message, there's only ASCII
caracters, The Bat! will set the caracter-set to US-ASCII which is
coded on 7 bit.

If you're writing some accent in it (example : éàù, etc.), The Bat!
will set it to the default character-set, that is to say ISO-8859-1 in
your case. ISO-8859-1 is coded on 8 bits.
-- 
Ludovic LE MOAL (Quimper - France)
URL:http://www.lemoal.org/ ICQ# 92250692
Using The Bat! v3.0 on Windows 98 4.10



Current version is 3.00.00 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
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Re: Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII, sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit ! My mails sources : Sometimes they are 8 bit, sometimes they are 7 bit, Sometimes they are ISO 8859-1, sometimes they are US quote printable ASCII...

2004-09-30 Thread Mica Mijatovic
   ***^\ ._)~~
 ~( __ _o   Was another beautiful day, Thu, 30 Sep 2004, 
   @  @  at 15:38:47 +0200, when Ludovic LE MOAL wrote:

You guys could kill someone's system by this tapeworm as the subject
line. (:

(Killing me wormly...)

Seriously. I heard that some mailers cannot manage such long subjects
and that they are driven crazy.

-- 
Mica
PGP key uploaded at: http://pgp.mit.edu/ once just before breakfast
[Earth LOG: 29 day(s) since v3.0 unleashing]



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