Tim wrote: > On Wed, 2008-07-30 at 20:54 -0500, Kevin Martin wrote: > > So if messages are sent using an encoding that you are not this will > > happen? Crud, how do you get around /that/? > > Your client should automatically display the text correctly, transcoding > if it has to. Of course, that will only work if: > > 1. The message correctly identifies which encoding it used. > 2. It's an encoding that your client understands. > 3. You have fonts that can provide the characters needed. > 4. You haven't forced your client to use a particular encoding. > 5. The message hasn't been mangled in transit. Thunderbird is good with character encodings in my experience, so points 1 and 2 shouldn't be a problem on your end, Kevin. Point 3 should give different symptoms. I don't know if point 4 is possible in Thunderbird. You may want to check that, but otherwise the problem is probably not with Thunderbird. Then it's either the other person's email program, or a broken gateway (point 5). > If you think all of that is a right headache, it is. That's why there > was a push for unicode all those years back. One scheme for everyone, > and no transcoding required. Unicode was invented some 50 years too late. A gazillion different encodings were created in the meantime, and now we have to cope with the mess. Björn Persson -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list