Jim Lucas wrote:
PHP Developer wrote:
some people don't remove the "Re:" prefix when answering to the
questions It opens a new topic on the list and that's not appropriate
. Thank ya
---------------------------------
Moody friends. Drama queens. Your life? Nope! - their life, your story.
Play Sims Stories at Yahoo! Games.
Clients that rely on the subject to determine if it a new thread are
broken.
In fact, if you looked the headers of your email you will see a line
like this
message-id: <757360.51350.qm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
my client takes that line and make a reference to it like this.
references: <757360.51350.qm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
it will also create a new message-id: line. something like this.
message-id: <d8269d910705181310k1f1416efq8ef7b77e793d77b6@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
if anybody replies to my message, the process is repeated.
Real, non-broken, email clients rely on the above lines to determine how
messages belong to one another. Again, it has nothing to do with the
subject line. Look at the subject line of this message.
As always it's not quite that simple. The problem is that there are no
hard and fast rules regarding mail headers, so when threading you can't
guarantee anything.
The "standard", or accepted reference algorithm for threading emails can
be found at http://www.jwz.org/doc/threading.html and is, I believe,
still used in a large number of clients including Thunderbird. Gmail
almost certainly uses their own concoction, but it probably follows
similar rules.
-Stut
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