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8:12 PM
@djsmiley2k Hmm, hold on I think I could push my test further.
 
@djsmiley2k Done what?
What happened?
 
the star list.
 
@djsmiley2k There is an issue with the link that was sent, it is something like"http://internalfileserverandnotweb\folder\folder\folder\folder_folder\fold‌​er with spaces\name name". There was a change of line after the first folder of folder with spaces in the source and displayed.
 
@djsmiley2k Sometimes the denizens of RA have a strange sense of humour, or perhaps we are all just bored ;)
 
Using http there was not a good idea, it should have been `\`. But since there are spaces, I think it would have added line breaks anyway
 
8:25 PM
@AlexandreVaillancourt Including this mess of slashes and backslashes?
 
@ThatBrazilianGuy Yes :P
I'm not sure who added that: was it Outlook who thought they'd help the guy or was the guy distracted when he pasted the link.
I have other examples where a URL with no space is truncated in the source AND in the rendering.
I think in any case, my colleagues should send as HTML. That would fix all the problems.
 
8:47 PM
&_&
 
@AlexandreVaillancourt lol. sending mails as html causes more problems than it solves.
 
for example you have to use sort of HTML 3
no CSS and layouts made from tables
 
^^^ that at least
And there are still a lot of text only email clients in use.
 
not to mention that most clients block external elements by default, so when you do read an HTML email it looks all janky.
 
imho all emails should be plaintext
 
8:54 PM
> Email software that complies with RFC 2822 is only required to support plain text, not HTML formatting. Sending HTML formatted emails can therefore lead to problems if the recipient's email client does not support it. In the worst case, the recipient will see the HTML code instead of the intended message.

Among those email clients that do support HTML, some do not render it consistently with W3C specifications, and many HTML emails are not compliant either, which may cause rendering or delivery problems, especially for users of Gmail.
 
lets not even open the shipping container full of worms that is outlook....
3
 
> In particular, the <head> tag, which is used to house CSS style rules for an entire HTML document, is not well supported, sometimes stripped entirely, causing in-line style declarations to be the de facto standard, even though in-line style declarations are inefficient and fail to take good advantage of HTML's ability to separate style from content.
@Burgi barf ;)
 
YES!!! I HAVE MADE AN INCURSION ON @djsmiley2k's STARWALL!!!!!
6
 
lol
i still blame @Burgi
 
blame me for what?
 
8:59 PM
The best quote from that article:
> HTML usually looks like it has been designed by stoned amateur chimpanzees using Front Page Express with their feet
I am a luddite and proud of it :)
 
Well then I guess they should stop messing with the line breaks :p
 
9:16 PM
I realised by star'ing @Burgi i actually push him down ;D
 
wtf are you talking about?
 
magic
 
Bob
9:37 PM
morn
 
Bob
10:28 PM
@DavidPostill that article is like 15 years outdated...
 
 
1 hour later…
11:31 PM
@Bob Early morning for you no?
 
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