usefor-article-05 July 2001
[< Prev]
[TOC] [ Next >]
4.2.4. Comments
Strings of characters which are treated as comments may be included
in header-contents wherever the syntactic element CFWS occurs. They
consist of characters enclosed in parentheses. Such strings are
considered comments so long as they do not appear within a quoted-
string. Comments may be nested.
A comment is normally used to provide some human readable
informational text, except at the end of an address which contains no
phrase, as in
fred@foo.bar.example (Fred Bloggs)
as opposed to
"Fred Bloggs" <fred@foo.bar.example> .
The former is a deprecated, but commonly encountered, usage and
reading agents SHOULD take special note of such comments as
indicating the name of the person whose address it is. In all other
situations a comment is semantically interpreted as a single SP.
Since a comment is allowed to contain FWS, folding is permitted
within it as well as immediately preceding and immediately following
it. Also note that, since quoted-pair is allowed in a comment, the
parenthesis and backslash characters may appear in a comment so long
as they appear as a quoted-pair. Semantically, the enclosing
parentheses are not part of the comment content; the content is what
is contained between the two parentheses.
Since comments have not hitherto been permitted in news articles,
except in a few specified places, posters and posting-agents SHOULD
NOT insert them except in those places, namely following addresses in
From and similar headers, and to indicate the name of the timezone in
Date headers. However, compliant software MUST accept them in all
places where they are syntactically allowed.
[< Prev]
[TOC] [ Next >]
#Diff to first older
--- ../usefor-article-04/Comments.out April 2001
+++ ../usefor-article-05/Comments.out July 2001
@@ -12,6 +12,7 @@
fred@foo.bar.example (Fred Bloggs)
as opposed to
"Fred Bloggs" <fred@foo.bar.example> .
+
The former is a deprecated, but commonly encountered, usage and
reading agents SHOULD take special note of such comments as
indicating the name of the person whose address it is. In all other