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On Fri, Jun 13, 2003 at 08:46:52AM +0200, VEGH Karoly wrote:
> My question is: how to send the mail, that the attachments' filenames
> would be shown right in outlook?
Best way: Remove Outlook from the equation. You've found yet another
Outlook bug
On Wed, Dec 13, 2000 at 11:47:54PM -0800, Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
> does xfstt need the filenames to be all lowercase?
No, it doesn't care. Font names are not derived from the actual file
name.
> how about X's truetype font serving module? does that need the file to be
> all lowercase?
I don'
does xfstt need the filenames to be all lowercase?
how about X's truetype font serving module? does that need the file to be
all lowercase?
pete
On Wed 13 Dec 00, 11:34 PM, kmself@ix.netcom.com said...
> on Wed, Dec 13, 2000 at 08:35:27PM -0900, Ethan Benson ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> wrote:
> > On
on Wed, Dec 13, 2000 at 08:35:27PM -0900, Ethan Benson ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 14, 2000 at 06:20:05AM +0100, Patrick Schnorbus wrote:
> > Hey folks...
> >
> > i´ve just a little question!
> >
> > I´ve installed xfstt. Now i want to use some TrueType Fonts but theses a
> > probl
On Thu, Dec 14, 2000 at 06:20:05AM +0100, Patrick Schnorbus wrote:
> Hey folks...
>
> i´ve just a little question!
>
> I´ve installed xfstt. Now i want to use some TrueType Fonts but theses a
> problem. Most of them have capital letter filenames (TRUETYPEFONT.TTF)
> but i need them as 'truetype.
On Sun, Oct 10, 1999 at 10:50:56PM +0300, Heikki Vatiainen wrote:
> Rob Mahurin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Apparently about an hour ago something made a few files in my homedir
> > that began with "-", and now I can't read them and can't remove them:
> >
> > 15:30 ~ $ ls
> > total 80
> > -rw--
> Apparently about an hour ago something made a few files in my homedir
> that began with "-", and now I can't read them and can't remove them:
Try using midnight commander or some other tool like that to remove them.
--Ian Ehrenwald
Rob Mahurin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Apparently about an hour ago something made a few files in my homedir
> that began with "-", and now I can't read them and can't remove them:
>
> 15:30 ~ $ ls
> total 80
> -rw--- 1 alphengl alphengl 226 Oct 10 14:30 -011405
> -rw--- 1 alphe
On Sun, Oct 10, 1999 at 03:40:41PM -0400, Rob Mahurin wrote:
> Apparently about an hour ago something made a few files in my homedir
> that began with "-", and now I can't read them and can't remove them:
>
> 15:30 ~ $ ls
> total 80
> -rw--- 1 alphengl alphengl 226 Oct 10 14:30 -011405
>
> I mounted on my notebook the win95-partition as shown:
>
> mount /dev/hda1 /mnt/win95 -t vfat
>
> It seems to be with no problems. But in each win95 is a directory named
> "Program Files". I can't change in this dir, because it's a space in
> the filename. Has it a way to change in this dir
On Mon, Jan 18, 1999 at 02:02:00AM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Henning Makholm dixit:
>
> > Have you tried escaping the space in the shell? Either of
> >
> > cd "/mnt/win95/Program Files"
> > cd /mnt/win95/Program\ Files
> > cd /mnt/win95/Program' 'Files
> >
> > should work unless there is
Henning Makholm dixit:
>
> > mount /dev/hda1 /mnt/win95 -t vfat
>
> > It seems to be with no problems. But in each win95 is a directory named
> > "Program Files". I can't change in this dir, because it's a space in
> > the filename.
>
> Have you tried escaping the space in the shell? Either of
Matthias Schulz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> mount /dev/hda1 /mnt/win95 -t vfat
> It seems to be with no problems. But in each win95 is a directory named
> "Program Files". I can't change in this dir, because it's a space in
> the filename.
Have you tried escaping the space in the shell? Eithe
On Fri, 28 Aug 1998 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On 28-Aug-98 Tomt wrote:
> > I have some files I've transfered from my Windows NT machine and
> > they have several spaces in them like
> > This is a Test.txt
> >
> > How does linux treat spaces I'm tried the filename listed above and a
> > cou
On 28-Aug-98 Tomt wrote:
> I have some files I've transfered from my Windows NT machine and
> they have several spaces in them like
> This is a Test.txt
>
> How does linux treat spaces I'm tried the filename listed above and a
> couple of other variants?
If such a name is read from a direct
On Thu, 27 Aug 1998, Tomt wrote:
: Hi everyone,
:
: I have some files I've transfered from my Windows NT machine and they
have
: several spaces in them like
: This is a Test.txt
:
: How does linux treat spaces I'm tried the filename listed above and a
: couple of other variants?
> I have some files I've transfered from my Windows NT machine
> and they have several spaces in them like
> This is a Test.txt
>
> How does linux treat spaces I'm tried the filename listed above and a
> couple of other variants?
This\ is\ a\ Test.txt
slash works for all kinds of chara
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