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Re: LYNX-DEV more chartrans
From: |
Hynek Med |
Subject: |
Re: LYNX-DEV more chartrans |
Date: |
Tue, 25 Nov 1997 17:32:39 +0100 (MET) |
On Tue, 25 Nov 1997, Leonid Pauzner wrote:
> One more here, about charset assumption if we have 7bit text.
>
> A huge majority of texts have only us-ascii symbols,
> but if you check '=' or p)rint to email
> there is an assumed charset name introduced,
> non us-ascii in any case and possible non iso-latin-1.
Well, you can set your Assume_charset to US-ASCII if you want to..
> This may confuse people and some wrongly implemented mailreaders
> and possible increase haos.
It was actually me who suggested this - when you have the text converted
to your Display character set, it is actually in that display character
set and this character set is used for mailing - so formally is everything
right, of course, it's rather a overdimensioned when printing/mailing
US-ASCII texts, because your display character set is usually a superset
of US-ASCII. But marking the text with the display character set is
necessary when you for example send your 8bit-charset page via e-mail..
> Is it possible to test new coming page whether it have 8bit or not,
> and set the appropriate variable to us-ascii in the code?
You have to ask Klaus about this.. IMHO it would be rather hard to
implement.
> If yes, you may remove x00-x7f (or at least x20-x7e) region
> from every chartrans table (is there any exception from us-ascii conformance?
> maybe x7F somewhere?)
Well I think it's the same (i.e. all charsets are supersets of US-ASCII),
so there's no difference - it doesn't get any transofrmed anyway..
> >From the other hand, you still need to translate ©
> and others &...; in HTML.)
And to print/mail it.. You can set your display charset to "7bit
approximations" for these pages. Copyright (©) gets translated as
(C)..
Hynek
--
Hynek Med, address@hidden