J
John Dough
Almost always when I send someone a mail message and I get a reply that
includes the original message, I can see that where the lines break for the
person receiving the message is a LOT different than how I composed the
message.
To check this out, I just sent myself a message. When I received it and
opened it there were all sorts of line breaks that did not coincide with how
the message looked when I composed it.
Why doesn't the text just wrap at the RECEIVING end the way it does when one
is composing the message?
And if this is not possible, why isn't there some sort of preference where I
could perhaps limit the line length to something like 60 chars, to minimize
the possibility of this kind of problem for whoever receives my
message??????
includes the original message, I can see that where the lines break for the
person receiving the message is a LOT different than how I composed the
message.
To check this out, I just sent myself a message. When I received it and
opened it there were all sorts of line breaks that did not coincide with how
the message looked when I composed it.
Why doesn't the text just wrap at the RECEIVING end the way it does when one
is composing the message?
And if this is not possible, why isn't there some sort of preference where I
could perhaps limit the line length to something like 60 chars, to minimize
the possibility of this kind of problem for whoever receives my
message??????