Amos Shapira wrote:
On 07/10/2007, Alex Samad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, Oct 07, 2007 at 01:09:50AM +0000, Amos Shapira wrote:
DATA: malformed address: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>\n may not follow
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
: failing address in "To:" header is: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
It might be the @


Yes it might be, I now see that it isn't included in the definition of
"atext" (under 3.2.4 "Atom" in http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2822#page-12).

Maybe they should put this text in a comment ("()").

Also the "\n" looks a bit suspicious - maybe there is a missing "\r" there
somewhere?


\n just means "newline" - which can either be CRLF (usual format for Internet communications; Windows/DOS format) or LF-only (Unix text files), or even CR-only (old Macintosh).

Common confusion/misconception is that \n refers to LF only. This is not always the case-usually it refers to the portable "newline" that gets expanded to the proper characters depending on platform or context.

--Jeremy


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