[GNC] Gnucash - user: Google result
David Reiser
dbreiser at icloud.com
Tue Jul 7 11:26:07 EDT 2020
And to make matters more confusing, those two options aren’t exclusive. Both are checked in my Edit>Attachments pop-out. I think I viewed the “windows-friendly” as preventing resource forks in the old days and possibly managing file name character sets at some point since then.
The annoying part of the “always at the end” doesn’t necessarily preclude such an attachment from still being officially an inline inclusion, just that it’s placed at the end.
--
Dave Reiser
dbreiser at icloud.com
> On Jul 7, 2020, at 11:11 AM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net> wrote:
>
> Sure enough, it seems the last update set me to ‘Always Send Windows-Friendly Attachments’ instead of ‘Always Insert Attachments at End of Message’. (I don’t recall where the preference was originally when I set it years ago. It is now in Edit > Attachments instead of in Mail > Preferences where Apple’s own guidelines say it should go, but I guess they get to violate their own rules.)
>
> This is an example of good case for not setting a new default preference on a software update!
>
> Hope anyone using Mail.app with the same problem finds this...
>
> Regards,
> Adrien
>
>> On Jul 7, 2020 w28d189, at 10:01 AM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net> wrote:
>>
>> Nope, it was an attachment. (or supposed to be) I made sure to put it at the end, and my mail.app is set to ‘attach’ rather than ‘inline’. I confess, mail.app could have done what it wanted though. It wouldn’t be the first time.
>>
>> But here is the URL: https://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-user/2015-January/057812.html
>>
>> Note my followup message that I realized this is a hit from a list topic with that term, so there isn’t likely anything to be done about it.
>
>
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