Matt Kettler said:
> I'd advise that you not browse the descs on the website, look at the ones
> that are in the .cf files themselves.
>
> What happens is many rules have alternate descriptions in non-english
> languages. The parser that crunches through the rules to create that
> webpage wind
I'd advise that you not browse the descs on the website, look at the ones
that are in the .cf files themselves.
What happens is many rules have alternate descriptions in non-english
languages. The parser that crunches through the rules to create that
webpage winds up with different languages ba
From: "Michael Moncur" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
That's true, but he was probably referring to the "tests" page on the
Spamassassin web site, which has had some weird multilingual descriptions
for a while, not just for non-English rules. Here's a sample:
X-Mailer header indicates a non-spam MUA (Outloo
> You probably don't have to worry about them. Any rule definition
> begining with "lang xyz" will only be used if one of the language
> environmental variables is set to that language. SpamAssassin first
> looks in $LC_ALL, then $LANGUAGE, then $LC_MESSAGES, then $LANG, and
> assumes a language
On Tuesday 26 November 2002 11:16 pm, Rob MacGregor wrote:
> Some time back I browsed the list of tests so I could tweak the
> values to suit my own particular situation. Yesterday I did this
> again but noted that while some descriptions are in English, some are
> French and some are other langua
Some time back I browsed the list of tests so I could tweak the values to
suit my own particular situation. Yesterday I did this again but noted that
while some descriptions are in English, some are French and some are other
languages.
This has made understanding the nature of some of the test