On Thu Jul 1 22:27:54 1999,
Thomas Roessler wrote [To Mutt User List]:
> > I think it's look like a bug. I read that mutt converts `non-
> > printable' chars into question marks -- if someone need it it's ok,
> > but i want to turn it off. Unfortunately there are two `stan-
> > dards' in Poland -- iso-8859-2 and cp-1250, sometimes I also get
> > some mail with charset us-ascii, though it contains iso or cp
> > chars.
>
> This looks like you don't have a locale problem, but like your
> system doesn't have the character set definition files in place.
> Also, what's the setting of your configuration's $charset variable?
$charset in .muttrc? It's "iso-8859-2".
Charset definition files from mutt? They are in /etc/charsets, as
it was set in (little changed by me) rpm's spec file.
System: Linux 2.2.10 [using ncurses 4.2]
Compile options:
-DOMAIN
-HOMESPOOL -USE_SETGID -USE_DOTLOCK +USE_FCNTL -USE_FLOCK
+USE_IMAP +USE_POP +HAVE_REGCOMP -USE_GNU_REGEX +HAVE_COLOR
+HAVE_PGP5 +HAVE_PGP2 +HAVE_GPG
+USE_NNTP +USE_IMAP -BUFFY_SIZE
-EXACT_ADDRESS +ENABLE_NLS +COMPRESSED
SENDMAIL="/usr/sbin/sendmail"
MAILPATH="/var/spool/mail"
SHAREDIR="/etc"
SYSCONFDIR="/etc"
ISPELL="/usr/bin/ispell"
_PGPPATH="/usr/bin/pgp"
_PGPV2PATH="/usr/bin/pgp"
_PGPV3PATH="/usr/bin/pgp"
--
Daniel `bonkey' Bauke; http://www.oho.com.pl/~bonkey/; {happiness=bike&&unix;}