On Tue, January 30, 2007 11:06 am, Jay Blanchard wrote:
> [snip]
> of course people read documentation before asking help
> [/snip]
>
> ROFLMMFAO! Sorry, that just made my day!

Actually, I suspect most people at least make some kind of attempt to
read docs before posting here...

Reading does not guarantee comprehension.

For that matter, reading WHICH docs is always an interesting
challenge.  Clearly, nobody can read *ALL* the docs.

And it's very very very easy when entering a new domain to read and
comprehend what seems like a reasonable amount of documentation, but
still be missing some crucial fundamental bit of information.

This is often-times, in my experience, because:
A) Documentation assumes a certain knowledge level way higher than I
actually had.

B) Documentation glossed over something "basic" in such a way that did
not make it clear just how important/crucial that bit of info was.

I have no problem believing that the OP read the php.net IMAP pages
but didn't know that a single email could be stored in a file and
treated as an mbox.

Similarly, knowing that email is MIME encoded does not mean that one
should automatically know that MIME is the keyword commonly used to
find/describe the software, nor that that's the result you should
examine.

Most email is in Latin-1, ASCII, or UTF-8 these days, yet you wouldn't
search for those when trying to learn something about pasrsing a
single email, would you?

Throw in some second language difficulties, and I have to say that
maybe certain people were a bit hasty in their assumptions about the
effort expended by the OP...

Perhaps NEXT TIME we could avoid some of this noise?...

-- 
Some people have a "gift" link here.
Know what I want?
I want you to buy a CD from some starving artist.
http://cdbaby.com/browse/from/lynch
Yeah, I get a buck. So?

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