> I think you are overdoing it. I don't have a .mime.types file, nor any > encoding settings in my .muttrc, I'm just using a terminal with proper > UTF-8 support (rxvt-unicode).
> How are you testing the encodings of the files you send/receive? Thanks for the response. I'm using gnome-terminal. I started trying to do this thing because I was getting a lot of messages in plain us-ascii, and, I was getting mail in Spanish in iso..-1 badly rendered, therefore the charset-hoo for iso...-15, in order to see the accents. Now, Po files I send are "always" in utf-8, same as I receive. However, I was getting garbled iso...1 instead of the right thing when it came to receive it before. Then, mutt would also save the attachment with a garbled enconding. Now, with the fixes, when I send it, I get utf8 quoted, or plain/text with the right encoding but wrong mime, yet viewable (what po's are, just text). My problem is that the po is sometimes not viewable as app/gettext, quoted, attachement. This is available in /usr/share/doc/mutt. > l10n support ~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you want to see non-ASCII characters on a Debian system, there's no use fiddling with the variable "charset", as described in the manual page muttrc(5). Instead, you'll need to have the Debian package "locales" installed on your system and set the LANG or LC_CTYPE environment variable. e.g. US users will want to add "export LC_CTYPE=en_US" to their ~/.bashrc. < That's way I tried everything. You say you just use that terminal and it works? Regards, Omar -- "Why stop now just when I'm hating it?" -- Marvin The Paranoid Android -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org