In the Message Reader on the Toolbar select "Wrap long lines" or right click in the open message for available options.
The following is from the "Help Files"
"Wrap long lines, Reformat long lines.
Periodically, you will probably receive mail from other mail systems where the lines are extremely long, and hence can't
easily be read. These two options allow you to deal with malformatted mail of this kind - which of the two you will use depends on the message.
Wrap long lines simply chops the line at the nearest space to the right margin until the line is shorter than the right margin. This option is simplistic, but will work well if
the sender's mail program sends whole paragraphs as a single line.
Reformat long lines applies a much more complex reformatting approach that tries to estimate how the message was intended to appear:
it will usually do a better job of most messages than simple wrapping, but may scramble tables or figures that depend on long lines.
After atime, you will work out which of these settings suits the particular types of mail you receive. Whichever you turn on will
remain turned on for subsequent messages until you turn it off or select the alternative method."
--
James Quigley
<p>In the Message Reader on the Toolbar select "Wrap long lines" or right click in the open message for available options.</p><p>The following is from the "Help Files"</p><p><em>"Wrap long lines, Reformat long lines.</em></p><p><em>Periodically, you will probably receive mail from other mail systems where the lines are extremely long, and hence can't&nbsp;
easily be read. These two options allow you to deal with malformatted mail of this kind - which of the two you will use depends on the message.</em></p><p><em>Wrap long lines simply chops the line at the nearest space to the right margin until the line is shorter than the right margin. This option is simplistic, but will work well if
the sender's mail program sends whole paragraphs as a single line.</em></p><p><em>Reformat long lines applies a much more complex reformatting approach that tries to estimate how the message was intended to appear:</em></p><p><em>it will usually do a better job of most messages than simple wrapping, but may scramble tables or figures that depend on long lines.</em></p><p><em>After atime, you will work out which of these settings suits the particular types of mail you receive. Whichever you turn on will&nbsp;
remain turned on for subsequent messages until you turn it off or select the alternative method."</em></p>
<p>-- </p>
<p>James Quigley&nbsp;</p>