Mon, 11 Dec 1995 10:58:40 CST
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> The two methods most commonly used
>by mail programs are QUOTED-PRINTABLE and BASE64.
Yes. But ...
>The quoted-printable method takes the all 8-bit characters and turns them
>into and equal sign followed by the upper-case HEX code for the character.
>These are generally in the range =AA to =FF. Obviously, if you start
>using the = sign as a flag for a coding standard, you will have troble if
>your text has actual = signs in them (such as a password=blahblah
>specification). So the quoted-printable standard also translates the =
>signs in the original text to =3D. The idea is that the mail program on
>the receiving end will be MIME-compliant and will understand and decode
>these things without you ever knowing.
Right. So I encourage folks to avoid QP if possible.
--
Rick Troth, BMC Software, Inc. <[log in to unmask]> <USNMNEWN@IBMMAIL>
2101 City West Blvd., Houston, Texas, USA, 77042 1-800-841-2031
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