Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-03 Thread Daniel Bauke
On Sat Jul 3 15:38:47 1999, Staffan Hämälä wrote [To Mutt User List]: > Have you looked at the headerlines to see that they correctly > specify iso-8859-2 as the charset used? There is no problem with iso-8859-2, but with cp-1250. With both cases headers are correct. -- Daniel `bonkey' Bauke;

Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-03 Thread Staffan Hämälä
On Fri, 02 Jul 1999, Daniel Bauke wrote: > On Thu Jul 1 22:27:54 1999, > Thomas Roessler wrote [To Mutt User List]: > $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. I've experien

Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-01 Thread Daniel Bauke
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

Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-01 Thread David DeSimone
Thomas Roessler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > You mean, the documentation doesn't exist. That's because things are > supposed to happen automagically... Yes, they are "supposed to", but since there is no information on how the process works, if things don't happen the way they are supposed to,

Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-01 Thread Thomas Roessler
On 1999-07-01 10:28:27 +0200, Daniel Bauke wrote: > 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, som

Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-01 Thread Thomas Roessler
On 1999-07-01 13:35:33 -0500, David DeSimone wrote: > Unfortunately the documentation of this alleged process is so > sparse that I have been unable to determine how one goes about > setting up this recoding process. As far as I can tell, it is only > understood by the people that wrote the code

Re: national chars in mutt

1999-07-01 Thread David DeSimone
Daniel Bauke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Unfortunately there are two `standards' 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. Mutt is supposed to "recode" the message from the character set that the originato

national chars in mutt

1999-07-01 Thread Daniel Bauke
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 i