Anne Wilson wrote:
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Not wanting to hijack the web-page thread, but Kaj's comment reminded me of a
minor annoyance. I don't need special characters all that often, but when I
do I have to use kcharselect (not knocking it - it's a useful tool). I used
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On Monday 10 Jan 2005 17:41, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
Anne Wilson wrote:
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Not wanting to hijack the web-page thread, but Kaj's comment reminded me
of a minor annoyance. I don't need special
On Thursday 06 January 2005 05:25, Miark wrote:
On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 20:16:40 -0500, Carroll wrote:
æ, ø and å or even the Euro-symbol ___.
While I can't speak for David, using KMail 1.7 under KDE
3.3.0-5 I could read all of the Scandinavian characters as well
as the Euro symbol in
On Thu, 6 Jan 2005 09:45:34 +0100, Kaj wrote:
...citizens
of English-speaking countries rarely need anything besides
us/uk-ascii
Anyway, an easy way to check what charsets are installed is :
Open a browser, i.e. Firefox. Select View --Character Encoding.
Ah ha! ISO-8859-1 is
On Thursday 06 January 2005 16:07, Miark wrote:
On Thu, 6 Jan 2005 09:45:34 +0100, Kaj wrote:
...citizens
of English-speaking countries rarely need anything besides
us/uk-ascii
Anyway, an easy way to check what charsets are installed is :
Open a browser, i.e. Firefox. Select
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 12:37 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 17:58, Miark wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've set the charset to iso-8859-15. But then again,
I don't use KMail for html. My guess is, that our American
friends here
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 22:25, David Reynolds wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 12:37 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 17:58, Miark wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've set the charset to iso-8859-15. But then
again, I don't use
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 04:55 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 22:25, David Reynolds wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 12:37 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 17:58, Miark wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 01:55 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 22:25, David Reynolds wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 12:37 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 17:58, Miark wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've
On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 20:16:40 -0500, Carroll wrote:
æ, ø and å or even the Euro-symbol ___.
While I can't speak for David, using KMail 1.7 under KDE 3.3.0-5 I could read
all of the Scandinavian characters as well as the Euro symbol in your
original post (and Anne's). Of course, when
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 03:55 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 22:25, David Reynolds wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 12:37 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 17:58, Miark wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've
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On Monday 03 Jan 2005 23:34, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Monday 03 January 2005 22:06, Anne Wilson wrote:
snip
For that matter, how did you get the symbol into this
message, as well as the code? If I type '#163;' into either
text editor or kword
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've set the charset to iso-8859-15. But then again, I
don't use KMail for html. My guess is, that our American friends
here (using US-ASCII or some Windows charset) won't be able to read
Scandinavian characters like æ, ø and å or
On Tuesday 04 January 2005 17:58, Miark wrote:
On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 00:34:26 +0100, Kaj wrote:
In KMail I've set the charset to iso-8859-15. But then again,
I don't use KMail for html. My guess is, that our American
friends here (using US-ASCII or some Windows charset) won't be
able to
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Not wanting to hijack the web-page thread, but Kaj's comment reminded me of a
minor annoyance. I don't need special characters all that often, but when I
do I have to use kcharselect (not knocking it - it's a useful tool). I used
to be able to
Anne Wilson wrote:
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Not wanting to hijack the web-page thread, but Kaj's comment reminded me of a
minor annoyance. I don't need special characters all that often, but when I
do I have to use kcharselect (not knocking it - it's a useful tool). I used
On Monday 03 January 2005 20:13, Anne Wilson wrote:
Not wanting to hijack the web-page thread, but Kaj's comment
reminded me of a minor annoyance. I don't need special
characters all that often, but when I do I have to use
kcharselect (not knocking it - it's a useful tool). I used to be
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On Monday 03 Jan 2005 20:15, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Anne, as a native English-speaker, you don't have to remember that
many ASCII escape-sequences. But a few, nevertheless, come in handy
like ½ (#189;), @ (#64;), £ (#163;) and a few more.
As a
Op Mon, 3 Jan 2005 21:06:50 + schreef Anne Wilson:
- From time to time, though, it is necessary to insert words from
other languages, so acute, grave, circumflex, umlaut and that
Spanish thingy that I can never remember the name for - the various
chars that use them come in very handy. I
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On Monday 03 Jan 2005 21:35, Paul wrote:
Op Mon, 3 Jan 2005 21:06:50 + schreef Anne Wilson:
- From time to time, though, it is necessary to insert words from
other languages, so acute, grave, circumflex, umlaut and that
Spanish thingy that I
On Monday 03 January 2005 22:06, Anne Wilson wrote:
snip
For that matter, how did you get the symbol into this
message, as well as the code? If I type '#163;' into either
text editor or kword I just get the literal string.
/snip
In KMail I've set the charset to iso-8859-15. But then again,
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