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OT: email drafting (was:Re: KWrite/printer problem)Reply bottom-posted.
-- Bruce Miller, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada bruce@...; (613) 745-1151 No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets. ----- Original Message ---- > From: david <gnome@...> > To: kde-linux <kde-linux@...> > Sent: Thu, October 8, 2009 7:31:46 AM > Subject: Re: [kde-linux] KWrite/printer problem > ... <snip> > >> Conclusion: Bruce's mail software doesn't send paragraphs wrapped > >> properly. ;-) > >> > > Really? It looks fine here. > > After I told Icedove here to wrap the lines - it wrapped his entire post > (originally just 4 long single paragraphs, each a single line) into a > single block of text. His mail software has characteristics of MS Outlook. > > There's reasons why the email convention is to have blank lines between > paragraphs. ;-) David, Ouch. By the standards of mailing lists, your suggestion that my "mail software has characteristics of MS Outlook" is moderately worded. Thank you. But this is a Linux mailing list and the comment makes me feel a little like a card-carrying Republican (God forbid!) whose idea at a Republican policy gathering gets a reaction of "that smacks of liberal thinking." Hint: it is only in the USA and nowhere else in the world, that the word liberal is a pejorative term. Allow me to reassure all on this mailing list (I already sent this to you off-list) that I currently use the Yahoo! Webmail client. I routinely draft messages of more than a couple of lines (including, btw, this one) in gvim and copy/paste them to the Webmail client. Moreover, I do not currently have a working Windows installation in my house and go to considerable length to avoid using Outlook when I am outside the house. From my perspective, the use of gvim (or any flavour of vim) + client allows me to ensure that messages go out with long "single-line" paragraphs. Far from being a bug, this is precisely a feature that I want. I am admittedly a grammar- and form- "Nazi" and badly word-wrapped text (like this paragraph intentionally is) drives me crazy. As a result, I tend to think less of the ideas of a writer who allows this to happen to his (or her) messages. There is a clash of conventions here. Generally accepted writing convention (not just e-mail) is to increase the "leading" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leading) between paragraphs, but not to alter it for items in a numbered list. It is a hold-over from the days of the typewriter to achieve the increased inter-paragraph leading by "double-spacing." A numbered list is not normally considered separate paragraphs. IIRC, and my memory of mark-up languages is very rusty, HTML, XML, their parent SGML, and their many siblings and cousins use a different end-of-line marker at the end of items in a numbered list from the end a paragraph. However, plain ASCII text treats any newline as a paragraph delimiter. I thus end up having to rely on the word-wrap algorithms of my recipients' e-mail clients to render plain-text messages in the same manner as I sent them. When it is essential that a text have exactly the same physical appearance as the writer originally wrote, it is time to turn to PDF. But that takes us beyond the scope of RFC-822 compliant e-mail. We have wandered far off the topic of printer problems with KDE4, kwrite and Konqueror. If you agree, could we take further discussion of this matter off the list? Best wishes Bruce ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde-linux mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-linux. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html. |
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