On 11 Jun 2020, at 2:09, Pete Resnick wrote:
> Charlie: First, do note that this is for the intro line in the message, not
> the Date: header field, which would be used for the important stuff.
That said, the intro line is not for you, it is for others, so it does not
matter if YOU understand h
> As someone who grew up using US dates, and then switched 30 years ago,
> I know both sides. And it's the human reading the intro line I was
> referring to; humans are easily confused by nature. I know to accept
> both formats, and I can still get it wrong.
it's a shame that iso did not standardi
On 11 Jun 2020, at 10:09, Pete Resnick wrote:
Charlie: First, do note that this is for the intro line in the
message, not the Date: header field, which would be used for the
important stuff. The Date: field is formatted unambiguously as part of
the protocol. For the intro bit, it's already amb
On 10 Jun 2020, at 18:46, Charlie Garrison wrote:
On 11 Jun 2020, at 4:30, m...@rhp.tw wrote:
When one replies to an email, MailMate formats the date/time like
so `On 10 Jun 2020, at 16:18...` While I understand that is how
most of the world references dates and times, I am one of those
unco
On 11 Jun 2020, at 4:30, m...@rhp.tw wrote:
When one replies to an email, MailMate formats the date/time like
so `On 10 Jun 2020, at 16:18...` While I understand that is how most
of the world references dates and times, I am one of those uncouth
Americans and wondering if there is a way to cha
On 10 Jun 2020, at 20:30, m...@rhp.tw wrote:
When one replies to an email, MailMate formats the date/time like
so `On 10 Jun 2020, at 16:18...` While I understand that is how most
of the world references dates and times, I am one of those uncouth
Americans and wondering if there is a way to ch
When one replies to an email, MailMate formats the date/time like so `On
10 Jun 2020, at 16:18...` While I understand that is how most of the
world references dates and times, I am one of those uncouth Americans
and wondering if there is a way to change the format?___