- From: Karl Ove Hufthammer <huftis@bigfoot.com>
- Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2000 16:29:41 +0100
- To: "Bruce Bailey" <bbailey@clark.net>, <w3c-wai-er-ig@w3.org>
- Cc: "Web Accessibility Initiative" <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
----- Original Message ----- From: "Bruce Bailey" <bbailey@clark.net> To: <w3c-wai-er-ig@w3.org> Cc: "Web Accessibility Initiative" <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org> Sent: Thursday, March 16, 2000 10:23 PM Subject: RE: Please review: Techniques For Evaluation And Implementation Of Web Content Accessibility Guidelines > I would point out that <q>--</q> is what both Karl Ove H. and Wendy C. used > in the signature portion of their email (a text-only medium) to convey the > meaning of a horizontal rule... Well, actually it's not, it's <q>-- </q> (note the space) which is a _signature delimiter_. It's used in both e-mail and newsgroups, so that e-mail clients can automatically remove the signature when replying (no point in quoting the signature). A "personal signature" is a short closing text automatically added to the end of articles by posting agents, identifying the poster and giving his network addresses, etc. If a poster or posting agent does append such a signature to an article, it MUST be preceded with a delimiter line containing (only) two hyphens (ASCII 45) followed by one SP (ASCII 32). The signature is considered to extend from the last occurrence of that delimiter up to the end of the article (or up to the end of the part in the case of a multipart MIME body). Followup agents, when incorporating quoted text from a precursor, SHOULD NOT include the signature in the quotation. Posting agents SHOULD discourage (at least with a warning) signatures of excessive length (4 lines is a commonly accepted limit). Ufortunately Outlook Express doesn't follow the standard, and actually *removes* space at the end of the line when sending/posting. Too bad really, since you then must *manually* remove the signature when replying. -- Regards, Karl Ove Hufthammer
Received on Friday, 17 March 2000 11:05:51 UTC