Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
>> That issue isn't caused by the sender, only by the receiver's Usenet
>> client.
>
> Wrong.
That would be a reasonable answer if and only if you were able to dictate how reality works. Were you
bestowed with that power?
>> Text lines which exceed 77 characters are perfectly valid, and they are
>> properly handled by some Usenet clients.
>
> "Valid" is meaningless in this context.
Only if you don't know what the context is or what "valid" is supposed to mean, or if you wish to pretend that
your baseless assertions don't actually need to be based.
No usenet protocol puts in place any limit on how many characters there might be on any line. In other words,
there is absolutely no technical reason for this limit.
The only reason behind the 72-76 character limit dates back to the days where people actually used computer
terminals which were, at best, only capable of displaying 80 characters per line, and software was developed
with this limitation in mind.
That is a thing of the past. There is a reason why the best reference you could come up with was a text which
was last updated way back in 1995, and even then it wasn't particularly cutting-edge.
I don't believe you are using such a terminal to access usenet, and the usenet client you are using does not
suffer from this limitation. I know it because I happen use it, and I never had any problem with other
people's line breaks.
So, either you intentionally configured it to screw that up, which means that you are complaining about your
own inability to use the software you've picked, or you actually don't have any relevant reason to complain
about the presence or absence of line breaks, which means you explicitly intended to whine about a non-issue
that doesn't even affect you.
Judging by your frothing rant, I would put my money on the latter.
But hey, keep believing that playing the role of a frothing member of the line break police actually helps
anyone communicate more effectively.
And in the process, do spend a couple of minutes reflecting on the irony of you wasting your time writing
insulting posts on how others should improve the way they communicate with other people.
Rui Maciel