(please remember to keep replies going to the list) > I still cannot see that that is can be a client side problem. I can > imagine that MS does not fully comply with HTTP standards (they have a > tendensy to ignore RFCs) and that may be the essense of this issue. > Still, it leaves me with a system that does not perform. Maybe its just > me, but I will find it embarassing to provide a service with a stray > > in the middle of the screen. What shall I tell the users when they > point it out to me? Its just my little finger print to say that 'Kilroy > was here'? Maybe that is exactly the right answer - the ways of a > programmer are sometimes strange ;) > > Are you working on this? Is anyone? (except from me that is)
I don't think anyone here is, since it's NOT a SquirrelMail bug. There are any number of factors that could be causing this, from bad PHP installations to buggy browsers, etc. It can't be our responsibility to solve problems like that that are out of the scope of this project. We're here to help as much as we can and *might* even apply a fix from our end if it seems reasonable and isn't seen as a hack from our perspective. But so far, a fix (or even the real problem) has not been identified... and I don't really expect that to change, since, after all, it's just a <br>. ;> If anyone can figure out what other part of the HTML might be affecting it, then maybe that'll be something we can look into...?? Sorry! - paul ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email sponsored by: Free pre-built ASP.NET sites including Data Reports, E-commerce, Portals, and Forums are available now. Download today and enter to win an XBOX or Visual Studio .NET. http://aspnet.click-url.com/go/psa00100006ave/direct;at.asp_061203_01/01 -- squirrelmail-users mailing list List Address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] List Archives: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_id)95 List Info: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/squirrelmail-users