Robert P. J. Day wrote:
On Wed, 24 Oct 2007, Jonathan Allen wrote:
Dear List,
Given that the preference on this list is trimming and
bottom/mid-posting, and that Thunderbird is one of the principle
mail agents used in the Fedora and Linux world, why does it always
open incoming emails at the top, and compose new emails with the
cursor at the top immediately ready to top-post?
the evilness of top posting is covered nicely here:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines#head-21931671219f9e2ecd6ec8655a3d582326699379
but, regardless of whether or not your email client can be configured
to automatically go to the bottom upon reply, there's nothing
inherently wrong with positioning you at the top initially for a
simple reason: your mail client clearly has no idea where you want to
start inserting reply text (what you would call "mid-posting").
it might be that you want to add some reply text immediately after
the first line, so it's your job to move there before typing.
I am trying to persuade a colleague of the evil of top-posting and
he has just beaten me up on exactly this point - *if* the Linux
community is to keen to discourage bottom posting, why don't the
standard tools work that way.
because "bottom posting" doesn't necessarily mean *exactly* bottom
posting -- it simply means adding your reply text *after* what you're
replying to. and it's perfectly acceptable for something like that to
happen near the top of the message.
I was flabbergasted to find that he was right.
you need to train yourself to be less easily flabbergasted. :-)
rday
p.s. i might go so far as to say that most people who whine
incessantly about having to move their cursor alllllllllllll the way
to the bottom of the message before typing in their reply are
precisely the same people who should be trimming the included text so
that they don't have that much to skip over in the first place.
By the way Thunderbird can be set for bottom comments. It might even
come with that :-)
--
Karl F. Larsen, AKA K5DI
Linux User
#450462 http://counter.li.org.