Sujet : Re: Seriation
De : rich (at) *nospam* example.invalid (Rich)
Groupes : sci.cryptDate : 01. Feb 2025, 16:56:54
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vnlg86$5q26$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
User-Agent : tin/2.6.1-20211226 ("Convalmore") (Linux/5.15.139 (x86_64))
Stefan Claas <
fgrsna.pynnf@vagrearg.eh> wrote:
Richard Heathfield wrote:
On 01/02/2025 12:19, Stefan Claas wrote:
<snip>
IIRC when encoding with Umlauts etc. at the same position the
original Umlauts will be shown.
Yes. By design, SCOS and SCOS2 preserve not only whitespace but
anything else they have not been told how to process[1]. We have
seen aob come a cropper by making whitespace significant in Usenet
ciphertexts, and that was precisely the problem I was guarding
against, but it also makes sense only to digest text it knows about
and pass through unmodified everything it doesn't, thus making
copy-and-paste ciphertext in an ASCII medium Just Work.
This should be not the case IMHO.
You may want to return to the original SCOS posting and reread the
purpose. SCOS's purpose, and your purpose, are divergent, so naturally
SCOS will make some choices that your purpose finds to be incorrect for
your purpose.
It is of course your prerogative to disagree with my design, but it is
likewise my prerogative to prefer a deliberately ASCII-only design for
use in an ASCII environment such as Usenet.
Well, maybe only a very few US hosting service are ASCII only in 2025,
but we should ignore them, as Eurasiens ... ;-) I added also the british
pound sign and Euro symbol. :-)
Reality is that while Usenet /can/ carry UTF-8 encoded text, the vast
vast majority of non-binaries Usenet (i.e., the 'text' portion) is
plain ASCII. This is mostly "self imposed" as most posters self-limit
to just the ASCII character set.
Note, I'm not saying this is good or bad (and one can make a very
coherent argument that in 2025 more non-ascii characters should be
seeing use) -- rather I'm just pointing out the reality of the current
use of the medium.