On Fri, 2 May 2014 16:57:36 +0200 Philippe Verdy <[email protected]> wrote:
> The email was sent from Gmail on its webmail, French edition. > May be Gmail is causing this, this is not expected and I don't know > why Gmail transforms the text to ISO 8859-1 (without breaking the > text without notice, it could had used windows-1252, which has > completely superseded ISO 8859-1 along with HTML5). The really weird thing is that the guillemets are ISO-8859-1 characters, so should only have been modified as part of the transfer-encoding. > Is « 20 °C » OK with the degree symbol? Weirdly, both the gullements and the degree sign are preserved in the plain text version of the e-mail I'm answering. Have Google just fixed their e-mail client? Richard. _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list [email protected] http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode

