On Wed, Jun 25, 2003 at 04:55:40PM +0200, Marek ?aska wrote: > On Wed, Jun 25., 2003 at 15:40, Colin Watson wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 25, 2003 at 02:56:56PM +0200, Josip Rodin wrote: > > > On Tue, Jun 24, 2003 at 10:22:15PM +0200, Marek ??aska wrote: > > > > One thing interests me. You run it just as editor, it means: > > > > #use debian::weeklynews::footer translator="Mr. Foo the > > > > Foot<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>" And it should produce > > > > bla...bla..bla... <a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">Mr. Foo the > > > > Foot</a>. > > > > but it makes > > > > bla...bla...bla...<a href="mailto:foo.com">Mr.Foo the Foot</a>. > > > > This is of course wrong. I don't know where it loses "@". > > > > > > @foo means array named foo in Perl. You probably need to surround it > > > with \Q and \E. > > > > Or just backslash the @? > I know that... I just mean, that it's not possible to write @foo directly in > wml. I with backslashed @ it doesn't work. I think it is not Perl's thing, > because when Perl gets @ it string, it is interpreted like a normal > character. [...]
$ perl -e 'print "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"' foo.com Denis