On Thu, 1 Mar 2001, Gavin Hamill wrote:
> Thanks for that :) 'reset' - feck, if I'd known it would be that simple...
>
> Right, will try that next time said thing happens! Thankyou!
It worked! Much appreciated!
gdh
Thanks for that :) 'reset' - feck, if I'd known it would be that simple...
Right, will try that next time said thing happens! Thankyou!
gdh
re,
Hall Stevenson([EMAIL PROTECTED])@Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 01:32:20PM -0500:
> > If I display a file which contains binary data, often there will
> > be a sequence of characters which the console interprets
> > to 'switch character sets' and then any lower case characters
> > become little boxes,
> If I display a file which contains binary data, often there will
> be a sequence of characters which the console interprets
> to 'switch character sets' and then any lower case characters
> become little boxes, or patches of fuzz, yet numbers and
> upper case characters are unaffected.
>
> I know
Quoting Gavin Hamill ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> If I display a file which contains binary data, often there will be a
> sequence of characters which the console interprets to 'switch character
> sets' and then any lower case characters become little boxes, or patches
> of fuzz, yet numbers and upper c
On Wednesday 28 February 2001 12:09, Gavin Hamill wrote:
> If I display a file which contains binary data, often there will be a
> sequence of characters which the console interprets to 'switch
> character sets' and then any lower case characters become little
> boxes, or patches of fuzz, yet numb
Hullo again.. sorry to bother you nice people, but this one has been
bugging me since I started using Linux a couple of years ago.. it's not
Debian specific, but I've had better, more educated responses from this
list than any other. Now, enough of the brown-nosing ;)
If I display a file which con
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