-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday, May 5 at 01:32 PM, quoth Christoph Kukulies: > During searching for a way to pretty print my Emails from mutt I found, > that all messages (or at least the message under concern) > are stored from ISO-8859-1 to quoted-printable.
I don't understand... you mean they're *converted* into quoted-printable from ISO-8859-1? > I tried various converters, especially "recode" and recode is > complaing about some ungueltige Eingabe in data. (when I type =FC > into stdin, recode behaves brave and issues an u-umlaut), so it's > not the needs getting used to command line syntax of "recode". I'm pretty sure recode is not what you want. My *guess* is that you have unset $print_decode, so mutt is passing raw message data to your $print_command. If you set $print_decode, mutt should convert all output into $charset as it gets passed to $print_command. > My questions are: > > \1 What mechanism causes mutt to produce a quoted printable encoded copy > of the message, when I save the file? None. Let me clarify: when you save a copy of a message somewhere, mutt leaves it AS IS (unless you use something like <decode-save>). So if the message was encoded with quoted-printable to begin with, it will stay that way. > \2 When I view the message in mutt, umlauts are shown as two byte > characters, e.g. an u-umlaut is represented as \374. > Would be nice, mutt would do that right away with the correct > character set. Only when invoking the editor (vi) to > write a reply, the characters are shown correctly. Technically, that's not a question. ;) But if mutt is displaying umlauts as byte-codes (e.g. \374) instead of as an umlaut or even as a masked unprintable character (displayed as a question mark), then your charset environment is incorrectly configured. Let me guess, you set $charset manually, don't you. (Hint: that's almost always the wrong thing to do, for lots of reasons.) Step 1: stop setting $charset Step 2: set up your LANG environment variable correctly Possible Step 3: correctly configure your terminal ~Kyle - -- I think we ought always to entertain our opinions with some measure of doubt. I shouldn't wish people dogmatically to believe any philosophy, not even mine. -- Bertrand Russell -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Comment: Thank you for using encryption! iEYEARECAAYFAkoAVQwACgkQBkIOoMqOI14LxACgw/qx8gVs3NDg8276Y2EUXom6 Mz0AmQEVnCdDTDoefCbXHNWUPbzcHLvn =dg0V -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----