From df88b9fadfcaf849d9f8c5c42c6013fbe8978b9e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Barry Warsaw Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2002 15:23:38 +0000 Subject: Document that the Charset constructor coerces its argument to lower case. --- Doc/lib/emailcharsets.tex | 9 +++++---- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/Doc/lib/emailcharsets.tex b/Doc/lib/emailcharsets.tex index d1ae728..d654ada 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/emailcharsets.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/emailcharsets.tex @@ -23,10 +23,11 @@ Certain character sets must be encoded with quoted-printable or base64 when used in email headers or bodies. Certain character sets must be converted outright, and are not allowed in email. -Optional \var{input_charset} is as described below. After being alias -normalized it is also used as a lookup into the registry of character -sets to find out the header encoding, body encoding, and output -conversion codec to be used for the character set. For example, if +Optional \var{input_charset} is as described below; it is always +coerced to lower case. After being alias normalized it is also used +as a lookup into the registry of character sets to find out the header +encoding, body encoding, and output conversion codec to be used for +the character set. For example, if \var{input_charset} is \code{iso-8859-1}, then headers and bodies will be encoded using quoted-printable and no output conversion codec is necessary. If \var{input_charset} is \code{euc-jp}, then headers will -- cgit v0.12