搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

What are these coloured vertical lines that fence in replies below the current message and can I get rid of them?

  • 1 个回答
  • 1 人有此问题
  • 3 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 Zenos

more options

As a message thread contains more replies I get more and more vertical coloured lines and the text space gets correspondingly narrower. How do I get rid of this?

As a message thread contains more replies I get more and more vertical coloured lines and the text space gets correspondingly narrower. How do I get rid of this?

所有回复 (1)

more options

Long-standing email practice (i.e. pre-dating any Microsoft involvement in email) is to use indents and > symbols to show quote levels.

> Fred said >> Dave said >>> Joe said >> >

Joe posted something. Dave replied. Fred commented on Dave's reply. The position of Fred's comment would be chosen make it clear that he was commenting on Dave's post and not directly replying to Joe.

Thunderbird simply replaces those nested > symbols with coloured bars. This is local and is purely cosmetic. Under the hood, so to speak, the > symbols are still there.

People who complain about this usually seem to have been brainwashed by Microsoft's lame attempt at tracking "who said what" by separating succesive posts with horizontal rules. Absolutely useless if you want to answer questions point by point (bottom posting or interleaved posting) rather than the top posting practice that Microsoft customarily assume and encourage.

Those same users often resort to using coloured text or other tricks to differentiate later replies from the text of earlier postings. All well and good until the message is viewed in a client or on a device where the colours aren't supported. In such a case, the > symbols would survive and allow the logical flow to be reasoned out.

You can switch Thunderbird to using the > symbols rather than converting them to the coloured bars.

http://kb.mozillazine.org/Quote_bars

But I wonder if you're actually hankering for the default Microsoft-driven top-posting convention?