RFC2821, the Internet standard governing electronic mail, is very specific that no line in an e-mail message body may exceed 1000 characters. This isn't optional - it's an absolute requirement.
Needless to say, there are plenty of developers out there who - whether through ignorance, laziness, carelessness or just stupidity - do not respect this type of requirement, unfortunately... For some reason, when they do, it's developers like me who actually *follow* the standards who seem to get hit with the problem. I never have understood that.
Mercury is *usually* generous about the 1000 character limit: in *most* places, it allows lines to be significantly longer than this, working on the traditional (and totally idiotic) Internet idea that you should be strict in what you offer and tolerant in what you receive. You'll notice that I'm not saying it does this everywhere - that's not a matter of design, it's just that a mail message can be read and manipulated in so many places in Mercury, and the code has been around for so long that I just haven't got around to being "generous" everywhere.
Mercury/32 v4.51 (which should be out later today or tomorrow) has had the "generosity" added in a great many places just as part of the general development process. If you find that you still have this problem with v4.51, bump this thread and I'll see if I can diagnose it in a little more detail for you.
Cheers!
-- David --
RFC2821, the Internet standard governing electronic mail, is very specific that no line in an e-mail message body may exceed 1000 characters. This isn't optional - it's an absolute requirement.
Needless to say, there are plenty of developers out there who - whether through ignorance, laziness, carelessness or just stupidity - do not respect this type of requirement, unfortunately... For some reason, when they do, it's developers like me who actually *follow* the standards who seem to get hit with the problem. I never have understood that.
Mercury is *usually* generous about the 1000 character limit: in *most* places, it allows lines to be significantly longer than this, working on the traditional (and totally idiotic) Internet idea that you should be strict in what you offer and tolerant in what you receive. You'll notice that I'm not saying it does this everywhere - that's not a matter of design, it's just that a mail message can be read and manipulated in so many places in Mercury, and the code has been around for so long that I just haven't got around to being "generous" everywhere.
Mercury/32 v4.51 (which should be out later today or tomorrow) has had the "generosity" added in a great many places just as part of the general development process. If you find that you still have this problem with v4.51, bump this thread and I'll see if I can diagnose it in a little more detail for you.
Cheers!
-- David --