Stephen J. Turnbull wrote: >Mark Sapiro writes: > > > add_language('en', 'English (USA)', 'utf-8', 'ltr') > >Shouldn't this probably be default by now?
Yes, it should. But, we have superstitious beliefs that something unintended will be broken by this. Yet, I continue to suggest it as a workaround, and I've never recieved a report of a problem, so I will at least test it as default for Mailman 2.2. > > One thing to be aware of though is that although the monthly .txt files > > look like .mbox files, they don't contain complete message headers. In > > particular, even though the character set may now be utf-8 or koi8-r, > > there are no content-type or other headers in the file to so > > indicate. > >"Bad Pipermail! Baad, baaad Pipermail!" Or am I missing something? >Shouldn't the .txt files have a simple text/plain;charset=WHATEVER >MIME Content-Type? The issue is the .txt files for public archives are served directly by the web browser, not through a Mailman CGI, so it's entirely up to the web browser to specify the charset. We could put a Content-Type: at the head of the file, but in most cases, this would just be served as part of the text. Still, it would be useful information for the recipient, so I will look at that too. -- Mark Sapiro <m...@msapiro.net> The highway is for gamblers, San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan ------------------------------------------------------ Mailman-Users mailing list Mailman-Users@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users Mailman FAQ: http://wiki.list.org/x/AgA3 Searchable Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/mailman-users%40python.org/ Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/mailman-users/archive%40jab.org Security Policy: http://wiki.list.org/x/QIA9