Tom Gewecke wrote:
I have seen some fairly recent posts that say until Leopard, Apple Mail didn't send HTML mail. I will have to look into this to verify.
Apple Mail started sending html with Tiger, in April 2005. In Panther, it used .rtf instead. I have all these OS's running. Tiger's html also used mixed encodings, which, combined with bugs in Outlook, caused the annoying "Chinese" problem when accented characters were in the text.
It is going to be a couple of days before I get a chance to look at it. I'm now officially interested, so I want to know definitively what is going on just for my own sake.
But I am reasonably confident that it doesn't "send html" and that it never used .rtf. I am pretty sure that what happens is that it composes an HTML document to represent what you type and format and sends that, as an attachment, along with a plain text version of the same. Mail clients (some of them) are smart enough to just render the HTML as the message and ignore the plain text when they see a message with a single HTML attachment with an alternative plaintext. There is a way to send formatted text as "richtext" entities and that is how the Panther Mail worked, but that is not the same as RTF or HTML.
The current "standard" is, in fact, just a mess-o-hacks because Microsoft and AOL couldn't figure it out. Apple was years ahead of everyone with formatted e-mail way back in the Cyberdog years. Unfortunately, the e-mail standard essentially died and now Apple is working to keep up with the hacks. Due to the e-mail format disaster, I stopped writing e-mail software years ago. That was a good idea because the situation sure hasn't improved. That is why I say I'm "reasonably confident" and "pretty sure" because I haven't checked all the standards in a long time.
I think Apple got rid of the mixed encodings in Leopard, essentially fixing the problem by accommodating Outlook's bug.
Yep. They dumbed it down and hacked it up.
I personally don't care about either the bug or the inconvenience, but they help explain why some users come here with questions like the OP's.
I don't either. I also don't think that the average user really cares about my explanations or my annotated rant/history of e-mail standards. They want answers.
But I am interested because Apple Mail questions are pretty common and I would like to know in detail what is going on. Plus, I hope to be able to definitively tell someone like our poor original poster precisely how to get a formatted e-mail to display properly in Outlook et al. Look for lengthy reply from me, maybe sometime tomorrow. I'm pretty sure I can come with with a solution with a little experimentation and analysis.