On 08/25/12 15:45, Chris Jones wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 04:01:49PM EDT, Tim Chase wrote:
>> Depending on the environment and your terminal encodings, the ā
>> character may also map to some <alt+{char}> (or <meta+{char}>
>> depending on how it's created), so in addition to searching for a
>> mapping directly to ā, also check to see if the behavior of an
>> alt/meta combination is in play.
>
> But that's no excuse for substituting ā's (U+0101) for the OP's â's
> (U+00E2).. or did you..? or is it another instance of Google groups
> misbehaving..? ;-)
Interesting...when I look at
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/vim_use/rDgZc-az5I4
in Firefox, it shows as the three characters "i-with-umlaut,
inverted-question-mark, one-half", and viewing the source shows me
the content as it shows when I view-source on the message in my
sent-mail, thought the â character shows up as a
black-lozenge-containing-white-question-mark in FF.
It also seems that the OP's original inbound message came with the
following among the headers:
Subject: =?UTF-8?Q?Typing_"=C3=A2"_problem?=
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
which was somewhat strange to me. Which also explains why
Thunderbird chose to reply in ISO-8859-1
Anyways, it is what it is.
-tim
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