Jesper Harder writes: > Xavier Maillard writes: > > > I know Emacs is able to use utf-8 encoding so Gnus is. > > > > My question is more a question of compliance with other MUAs. > > Would you recommend your users to use utf-8 as a default encoding > > system ? > > No, because there's no reason to use UTF-8 if a more widely supported > charset is sufficient. Ok for that. So what would be the default charset to recommend to people ? Why the hell was utf-8 invented so ? > To use UTF-8 by default would also be against RFC 2046: > > ,----[ RFC 2046, Section 4.1.2. ] > | > | In general, composition software should always use the "lowest > | common denominator" character set possible. For example, if a > | body contains only US-ASCII characters, it SHOULD be marked as > | being in the US- ASCII character set, not ISO-8859-1, which, > | like all the ISO-8859 family of character sets, is a superset of > | US-ASCII. More generally, if a widely-used character set is a > | subset of another character set, and a body contains only > | characters in the widely-used subset, it should be labelled as > | being in that subset. This will increase the chances that the > | recipient will be able to view the resulting entity correctly. > `---- > But if the message contains characters (or combination of characters) > where a _single_ iso-8859-x charset can't be used, then by all means > use UTF-8. This is far better than sending a multipart message > (which Gnus does if UTF-8 isn't available). Thanx for the hint. zeDek -- "Just did it."