Applicable for strings not intended for user consumption.
A %d string format code can generate eastern-arabic numerals
for users with an arabic locale.
V/k9 (20763): conn1103774136>>> 5 UID SEARCH ٦٤٦:٦٧٠ NOT DELETED
V/k9 (20763): conn1103774136<<<#5# [BAD, Invalid Search criteria]
E/k9 (20763): synchronizeMailbox
E/k9 (20763): com.fsck.k9.mail.store.ImapStore$ImapException: Command: UID SEARCH ٦٤٦:٦٧٠ NOT DELETED; response: #5# [BAD, Invalid Search criteria]
All \r and \n codes have been replaced with <br />, so the patterns in
these replacements don't match anything.
This problem has existed for some time -- since commits 1ea27d7 and
e12dd32.
No attempt is made here to reimplement the replacements because users are
now used to the current behavior without much apparent complaint, and such
replacements are never perfect and can occasionally fail to work as
desired without additional tweaking for special cases.
There's currently a bug in linkifyText() that can lead to a
StringIndexOutOfBoundsException when the text contains a
bitcoin URI and a "web" URI near the end of the text.
This builds upon the efforts started 2 commits back where \r\n is used for
all message text and \n is only used when the text is inside an
EolConvertingEditText widget.
Dynamically generate the CSS style for <pre> elements
for inclusion in the HTML <head> element when messages
are displayed.
This permits a user to change their font-family preference
for plain text messages and see the results immediately.
Obviously any old locally-stored messages that had their
font-family stored with them will continue to display using
that font-family, irrespective of the user's current
preference setting.
The MIME type for the supplied text was always text/html,
so there is no need to pass that as a parameter.
Furthermore, we are relying on it being text/html because
we are wrapping it with HTML code.
Likewise, change/simplify/rename AccessibleWebView.loadDataWithBaseURL().
Now that MessageWebView has 'setUseWideViewPort(true)',
the wide view port is excessively wide. It turns out
Android is using a fixed width of 980 px, so that even
plain text messages (which are already wrapped to fit
the screen) have a large empty area beside them when
scrolled to the left.
Injecting a meta tag in the html header fixes the
problem.