Philip Webb wrote:
> 070813 Philip Webb wrote:
> > I now have (via a line in .bashrc ):
> >
> > LANG=
> > LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8" ... snip ...
> > LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
Ideally LANG should be set and LC_ALL unset. The individual LC_*
variables will take their value from LANG when LC_ALL is u
070813 Philip Webb wrote:
> I now have (via a line in .bashrc ):
>
> LANG=
> LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8" ... snip ...
> LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
>
> There's no difference in the headers.
> It occurs to me that I'm running Mutt via 'konsole -e mutt',
> which is restarted automatically by KDE .
> I di
070812 Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> You will have to use a UTF-8 locale
> if you want mutt/gvim to be able to handle anything beyond ASCII.
> When using a UTF-8 locale, mutt correctly determines
> whether the produced message fits in us-ascii, iso-8859-1 or needs utf-8.
I now have (via a line in .b
Philip Webb wrote:
> purslow: system> locale
> LANG=
> LC_CTYPE="POSIX"
You will have to use a UTF-8 locale if you want mutt/gvim to be able
to handle anything beyond ASCII. When setting a POSIX locale, I
also get this:
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=unknown-8bit
When using a UTF-8
070811 Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> For the one you are actually using on the console (whether VT or xterm).
> look at the output of 'locale'.
purslow: system> locale
LANG=
LC_CTYPE="POSIX"
LC_NUMERIC="POSIX"
LC_TIME="POSIX"
LC_COLLATE="POSIX"
LC_MONETARY="POSIX"
LC_MESSAGES="POSIX"
Philip Webb wrote:
> 070811 Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> > This suggests you are using a UTF-8 locale.
>
> In /etc/locale.gen I have
>
> en_US ISO-8859-1
> en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8
Well, that just shows which locales you have available, not which
one you are actually using on the console (whether VT
070811 Philip Webb wrote:
> 070811 Benno Schulenberg wrote:
>> That does not solve the actual bug:
>> Mutt should not advertise charset=iso-8859-1 ,
>> when the message contains UTF-8.
In .muttrc I have:
set charset="iso-8859-1"
Perhaps this sb changed to correspond with what Vim is doing ?
070811 Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> Philip Webb wrote:
>> I write e-mails with Gvim called up by Mutt (as now).
>> [...]
>> termencoding -- character encoding used by the terminal
>> set tenc=utf-8
> This suggests you are using a UTF-8 locale.
In /etc/locale.gen I have
en_US ISO-8859-
Philip Webb wrote:
> 070810 Alexander Skwar wrote:
> > You wrote: "(I've just been reading LeCarré)". Notice the
> > letters "é". This looks quite a lot like UTF-8 to me.
> > In your header, "you" are saying, that you don't use UTF-8,
> > though.
>
> I write e-mails with Gvim called up by Mutt (a
070810 Alexander Skwar wrote:
> You wrote: "(I've just been reading LeCarré)". Notice the letters "é".
> This looks quite a lot like UTF-8 to me.
> In your header, "you" are saying, that you don't use UTF-8, though.
I write e-mails with Gvim called up by Mutt (as now).
My Gvim settings (probably
Philip Webb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 070810 Benno Schulenberg wrote:
>> Philip Webb wrote:
>>> (I've just been reading LeCarré),
>> Your email uses UTF-8,
>
> What do you mean ?
You wrote: "(I've just been reading LeCarré)". Notice the letters "é".
This looks quite a lot like UTF-8 to me.
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