Kārlis Miķelsons said:
> >Latin1 mail with umlauts and sz in sender's name mail body renders
> >fine here in mutt in xterm in the UTF-8 locale. So you should be
> >able to get it to work. I suspect misconfiguration rather than a bug,
> >though a bug is of course a possibility.
> >
> >What does your local configuration look like?
> >Are you aware of http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html#locales ?
> Yes, I've got "export LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8" in my .xinitrc.
>
> $ env | grep LC
> LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8
> $ locale
> LANG=
> LC_COLLATE="C"
> LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8
> LC_MONETARY="C"
> LC_NUMERIC="C"
> LC_TIME="C"
> LC_MESSAGES="C"
> LC_ALL=
Mutt works OK for me with multiple sets of non-ASCII charecters,
including advanced punctuation, cyrillic, extended Latin, etc.
(Basically everything one may possibly need for English, Serbo-Croatian,
Russian and French).
$ locale
LANG=en_US.UTF-8
LC_COLLATE="C"
LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8"
LC_MONETARY="C"
LC_NUMERIC="C"
LC_TIME="C"
LC_MESSAGES="en_US.UTF-8"
LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
I guess you could try setting LC_MESSAGES (if mutt happens to take it
for display charset, this trick my work - I can't test it right now).
FWIW did you make sure UTF-8 works on your terminal at all? Did you try
mutt in uxterm?
--
Dmitrij D. Czarkoff