Advanced Formatting help
Experiment with %m %n %a and %u(), %e(), %rEU(),
%rEUN(), %rUN() and %rEN(), and study the example above.
There are two types of commands. Replacement commands, which are
automatically replaced by specific information, and encoding
commands, which encode information in various ways.
The replacement commands are optional, as the data they are
replaced with can also be entered manually into the advanced
formatting field. (replacement
commands).
Replacement commands
Command
| Replaced with |
%a
| The address entered as input |
%n
| The name entered as input |
%m
| "mailto:" |
The encoding commands all encode data within their brackets in
various ways. The encoding commands are named to provide a mnemonic
reminder to help remember what the result of any command will be.
(mnemonics, encoding
commands)
Mnemonics
Letter
| Meaning |
e
| "Escaped" |
u
| "Unicode" |
n
| "Normal" |
r
| "Random" |
Encoding commands
Command
| encoding |
%u()
| unicode |
%e()
| escaped |
%rEU()
| randomly unicode or escaped |
%rEN()
| randomly escaped or normal |
%rUN()
| randomly unicode or normal |
%rEUN()
| randomly escaped, unicode or
normal |
"%" is the "escape" character. To use "%" in the output, place
"%%" in the input. For example, using "abc %%rUN(foo)" as input will
result in "abc %rUN(foo)" as the final output.
Note, not all %'s will be interpreted. Only those accompanying a
command (replacement or encoding) will be replaced with the proper
output. |