Hi Aleksander, > For English-speaking countries UTF-8, in majority, means ASCII, they > can see no difference.
I don't think that's the case. Even North Americans, who have $ in ASCII, still find ‘ ’ “ ” and … cropping up, especially when services automatically convert ` ' " " and .... And then there's £ and €. > As an advantage they can use foreign names like Moebius in original, > this makes message more readable. But I'm afraid they wouldn't be > happy with message written in Russian, Chinese or Korean. The UTF-8 fonts on systems like Linux, and I assume Windows and Mac too, handle these just fine; Cyrillic, Chinese, and Japanese spam turns up here daily and mhshow copes. > But restrict the entire nmh to utf-8 charset would cripple system. What language/charset/locale is it that you have where UTF-8 causes problems? Cheers, Ralph. _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list Nmh-workers@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers