So one of the issues, with Subject or Body, is that when an encoded message is 
unpacked for reading,
and then recoded for a reply or forwarding, the several different mail 
reader/editors involved in the
process tend to mess things up.  I was not able to read the emojis in your 
reply to the list.

  Wayne


> Begin forwarded message:
> 
> From: "Ralf Mattes" <r...@mh-freiburg.de>
> Subject: Re: [LUTE] Better UNICODE Test �� �� ���� �� 
> ����
> Date: July 29, 2017 at 10:29:42 AM EDT
> To: "Wayne" <wst...@cs.dartmouth.edu>
> Cc: "David Van Edwards" <da...@vanedwards.co.uk>, "Rainer" 
> <rads.bera_g...@t-online.de>, "Lute net" <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
> 
> 
> Am Samstag, 29. Juli 2017 14:41 CEST, Wayne <wst...@cs.dartmouth.edu> 
> schrieb: 
> 
>> 
>>   ��
> 
> Thanks a lot! Word encoding seems to work now. And even so my humble emacs 
> can't display emojis I
> appreciate your reference to the original context :-)
> 
> Cheers, RalfD
> 
>> 
>>    Wayne
>> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> Dear Rainer,
>>> 
>>> Just to check, this is using the normal Mac 
>>> keystrokes for diacriticals, I wonder if it will 
>>> be mangled by the Lute Net software?
>>> 
>>> Ü Ä Ö  ä ö ü é â è
>>> 
>>> Best wishes,
>>> 
>>> David
>>> 
>>> At 14:20 +0200 29/7/17, Rainer wrote:
>>>> I have sent this mail with utf-8 encoding and everything looks OK.
>>>> 
>>>> Rainer
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> On 29.07.2017 13:40, Rainer wrote:
>>>>> German:  ÄÖÜ äöü ß
>>>>> 
>>>>> French:    éâàè
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> To get on or off this list see list information at
>> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


--

Reply via email to